As you know I am into old textbooks, this stuffy endeavour...
But sometimes they leave me puzzled. Here an advice out of a textbook, lying for weeks at my desk with this sentence marked by me:
Weddings
....
After the event have enlarged (20"x16") contacts made (colour and b/w) from which to chose the final print.
(Calder/Garret , "The 35mm Photographer's Handbook" , 1979)
We all know how a contact print of a 35mm roll looks like. But I wonder how an "enlarged contact" would be achieved.
-) make a contact print of a roll in a common filmstrip-contact-easel, process it, put it at a repro-stage, make a copy on 35mm film, process it and from this make an enlarged print of the original contact, for better viewing.
What a hassle.
-) make an contact-like enlargement of the film-strips
But this necessitates at least a 8x10" enlarger. Which wedding photographer had such, let alone a 35mm photograhper, addressed here?
In addition laying 35mm film strips in a plain 2-panes hinged negative holder is a hassle and I do not know of 8x10 35mm-film-strips negative holder.
I got the the german edition of this book too. The translator is a experienced author, but he erroneously translated it as advice to the 35mm photographer doing it himself, and even leaving out the size of the print.
I read this version first which got me puzzled.
So, what workflow could be meant here?
Were there commercial labs doing such pseudo contact prints in a let's say 10x10 enlarger with a negative stage dedicated to 35mm strips?
But sometimes they leave me puzzled. Here an advice out of a textbook, lying for weeks at my desk with this sentence marked by me:
Weddings
....
After the event have enlarged (20"x16") contacts made (colour and b/w) from which to chose the final print.
(Calder/Garret , "The 35mm Photographer's Handbook" , 1979)
We all know how a contact print of a 35mm roll looks like. But I wonder how an "enlarged contact" would be achieved.
-) make a contact print of a roll in a common filmstrip-contact-easel, process it, put it at a repro-stage, make a copy on 35mm film, process it and from this make an enlarged print of the original contact, for better viewing.
What a hassle.
-) make an contact-like enlargement of the film-strips
But this necessitates at least a 8x10" enlarger. Which wedding photographer had such, let alone a 35mm photograhper, addressed here?
In addition laying 35mm film strips in a plain 2-panes hinged negative holder is a hassle and I do not know of 8x10 35mm-film-strips negative holder.
I got the the german edition of this book too. The translator is a experienced author, but he erroneously translated it as advice to the 35mm photographer doing it himself, and even leaving out the size of the print.
I read this version first which got me puzzled.
So, what workflow could be meant here?
Were there commercial labs doing such pseudo contact prints in a let's say 10x10 enlarger with a negative stage dedicated to 35mm strips?
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