Flash for pinting...tell me more.
I wanted to dupe some really-pushed E6 (EPJ 320t - gorgeous color and grain when pushed) onto Velvia - the lab said "that's impossible".
I hate that word, but I only had a cheap condenser enlarger (Beseler Printmaker 35). So I made a new front condenser door out of cardboard and taped a cheap flash to it, so the flash hit the light bulb. This gave me a "daylight" enlarger. I think I stuck like 1/4 CTO lighting gel in the filter drawer to take the flash from blue-ish to daylight. I also chopped up some ND gel to fit the filter drawer. So I had the light bulb for focusing and framing, and a radio slave hooked to the flash for exposing.
I tested with 4x5 color polaroid; I just used a block of wood to hold the polaroid back level, did a strip test and dialed in the exposure with aperture and ND, then moved to 4x5 or 8x10 sheet film. Worked fantastically. So I'm thinking for large prints, I'll at least try this with my MXT, and use full-CTO gel to get the color in the tungsten range (so the B&W paper will get the right color of light... hopefully...) Certainly worth a test, though I'll need to rig up something that replaces the lamphouse, or get a spare lamphouse and cut a hole in it. I lay awake and figure all this stuff out when I should be sleeping.
E6 Duped to Velvia: