tom williams
Subscriber
I'd appreciate any leads to a commercial lab that will accept my mailed-in C-41 4x5 negatives for printing directly, rather than from a scan.
Thanks.
Thanks.
Last edited:
for printing directly, rather than from a scan
I've shot and developed my first large format color negatives, but have no experience in (or equipment for) color enlarging/printing. I want to evaluate the negatives for larger-scale enlargement and framing, so I turn to a commercial lab for intermediate prints.What are your expectations? I.e. why do you consider this route?
I've shot and developed my first large format color negatives, but have no experience in (or equipment for) color enlarging/printing. I want to evaluate the negatives for larger-scale enlargement and framing, so I turn to a commercial lab for intermediate prints.
My sole basis for an optical print preference comes from a comparison - by a non-professional photographer - of a pair of his prints from the same negative, one print from a scan and one optical print. Both prints processed by the same commercial lab. I thought the optical print clearly superior in clarity. Papers and finish were the same, as I recall. This was ten years ago, roughly. I can make the same comparison in present time, lab willing, but the optical print option seems hard to come by.
I've pinged Blue Moon (thanks dpurdy) and await a reply. From Tempe Camera's website (thanks Paul Howell - I'm near Prescott) I don't see any optical printing options.
I'm currently modifying an apparatus that looks like it was intended for (or capable of) stand photography, so I hope to be able to make my own digital reproductions shortly. But that would still leave the optical enlargement option hanging.
Overall it's a bit as I suspected: you appear to have the perception that an optical print is necessarily better, but this really is not the case. It depends. It's also not really (really not) the case that an optical print somehow shows more of what the negative has in itself or something along those lines.
One thing that is happenign now is that RA4 printing looks to be on the way out
Okay, I see. The thing is, given a good quality scan, the flexibility you have in making a print is much greater. Quality wise, an optical print is not necessarily better. It really depends on the operator. I think Blue Moon are only set up to optically print from rolls (35mm and 120), but maybe they offer enlargement as well. Either way, this also means that in terms of exposure and color filtering, what you get is what the operator/printer sees fit. In the fine arts world, you either work with a printer whom you know and can trust to interpret your negatives in a way that you are happy with, or you work directly with them side by side to iterate towards the desired end result. In the digital/hybrid domain, it's easier to do the color grading/balancing yourself and then send out to any digital printer that uses the paper and surface finish of your liking. You're also not bound to RA4 that way.
Overall it's a bit as I suspected: you appear to have the perception that an optical print is necessarily better, but this really is not the case. It depends. It's also not really (really not) the case that an optical print somehow shows more of what the negative has in itself or something along those lines.
Not to discourage you from getting some optical prints done, don't get me wrong. But I do have some doubts as to how to interpret the result especially if you're working with a printer at arm's length and you're not intimately familiar with their work.
Yes, but it is not only the "technically perfect" picture people are looking for.
I want to evaluate the negatives for larger-scale enlargement and framing, so I turn to a commercial lab for intermediate prints.
I hadn't thought this through at all.But I do have some doubts as to how to interpret the result especially if you're working with a printer at arm's length and you're not intimately familiar with their work.
Within this scope and purpose, an optical print is not superior, nor necessarily more desirable. The same is true for digital output. In other words: all options can be kept open.I want to evaluate the negatives for larger-scale enlargement and framing, so I turn to a commercial lab for intermediate prints.
In your own case, there are numerous smaller labs which, when C-41 processing your film, can also furnish you with a medium quality scan at reasonable pricing, along with a basic RA4 contact sheet. Don't expect this to be fine-tuned or on a premium paper; but it will at least give you a reasonable clue what to expect from a larger print. It might be helpful in the beginning, before you learn to "read" the potential of a color negative for yourself using a lightbox.
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