Rolleiflexible
Member
I finally got around to testing Fotokemika papers today -- the VC Varycon, and Emaks in Grades 3 and 4.
The good news is that Grade 4 Emaks fits my negatives well. Until now I've been printing on Agfa MCC 111. The G4 Emaks, after a couple of minutes in a 1:3 KRST solution, gave nearly-indistinguishable results to Agfa MCC 111 printed with a 3 1/2 filter. The Emaks paper doesn't do quite as good a job as the Agfa in separating highlights, but I can live with it. It even has a slight warmth to it after a couple of minutes in the selenium, not unlike the Agfa paper. This makes me a very happy man indeed.
The Varycon puzzled me. I use Kodak VC filters on my Omega D2, with an Aristo cold light head and a modern V54 bulb. The Kodak filter set works fine with my MCC 111 and other VC papers. But printing Varycon with a #3 filter was like printing MCC 111 with a #5 filter. I had to drop down to a #1 filter to get an acceptable result from Varycon -- and even then it was a harder contrast than what I had gotten from the Grade 4 Emaks. So, my question:
Is there a filter set that one must use with Varycon to get appropriate contrast levels from the paper?
I love the Emaks, and am hoping the Varycon pleases as well ... if I can get the contrast right.
Sanders McNew
The good news is that Grade 4 Emaks fits my negatives well. Until now I've been printing on Agfa MCC 111. The G4 Emaks, after a couple of minutes in a 1:3 KRST solution, gave nearly-indistinguishable results to Agfa MCC 111 printed with a 3 1/2 filter. The Emaks paper doesn't do quite as good a job as the Agfa in separating highlights, but I can live with it. It even has a slight warmth to it after a couple of minutes in the selenium, not unlike the Agfa paper. This makes me a very happy man indeed.
The Varycon puzzled me. I use Kodak VC filters on my Omega D2, with an Aristo cold light head and a modern V54 bulb. The Kodak filter set works fine with my MCC 111 and other VC papers. But printing Varycon with a #3 filter was like printing MCC 111 with a #5 filter. I had to drop down to a #1 filter to get an acceptable result from Varycon -- and even then it was a harder contrast than what I had gotten from the Grade 4 Emaks. So, my question:
Is there a filter set that one must use with Varycon to get appropriate contrast levels from the paper?
I love the Emaks, and am hoping the Varycon pleases as well ... if I can get the contrast right.
Sanders McNew