I strongly recommend the white film for any visible light processes. And this is a case where you want to ensure a sharp file and the highest resolution settings for your printer.
I find that contact printing thru white film onto silver paper is a significant improvement over using an enlarger (although I never really liked enlargers that much). It is possible to get a sharp 16x20 print from a scan of 35mm film or from a digital SLR.
Yes, the white film does stop a lot of light - but most silver papers are sufficiently fast that this isn't a serious problem. Just use a 100W bulb with some sort of reflector.
Another note - use graded paper. Grade 2 or Grade 1 if you can find it. This makes the curve smoother and you don't need to worry about the color of the light.
I have also printed with white film onto AZO. But I think of AZO as another is a family of papers with a long tonal range - I am not an AZO expert. I would expect that contact printing a 5x7 negative onto AZO would be sharper than a digital negative. But I think the digital negative would be a good way to enlarge for AZO.
My print times with AZO were a few minutes but that's ok. I even tried just using the sun - to get out of the 'dark'.
bottomline - digital negatives are excellent for silver gelatin prints.
I find that contact printing thru white film onto silver paper is a significant improvement over using an enlarger (although I never really liked enlargers that much). It is possible to get a sharp 16x20 print from a scan of 35mm film or from a digital SLR.
Yes, the white film does stop a lot of light - but most silver papers are sufficiently fast that this isn't a serious problem. Just use a 100W bulb with some sort of reflector.
Another note - use graded paper. Grade 2 or Grade 1 if you can find it. This makes the curve smoother and you don't need to worry about the color of the light.
I have also printed with white film onto AZO. But I think of AZO as another is a family of papers with a long tonal range - I am not an AZO expert. I would expect that contact printing a 5x7 negative onto AZO would be sharper than a digital negative. But I think the digital negative would be a good way to enlarge for AZO.
My print times with AZO were a few minutes but that's ok. I even tried just using the sun - to get out of the 'dark'.
bottomline - digital negatives are excellent for silver gelatin prints.
my exposure time at f/4 with the enlarger head up to max was 25 seconds with white film, on ilford RC VC paper. i understand Azo being longer because it's a different process, but am i missing something? i don't need multi-minute exposures with 100w light bulbs to make a print.