Glassless negative carrier?

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jsimoespedro

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Hi all,

My negative carrier has two glass pieces - one is unpolished, acting as a diffuser and the second is clear.

Recently I found some negative carriers without the clear glass. What are the pros and cons?

Pros: No/less dust?
Cons: The negative will sag?

Thanks.
 

Neal

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Dear jsimoespedro,

The "unpolished" glass is there so that you don't see Newton's rings caused by putting the smooth side of the film against smooth glass. Obviously there is no issue with the emulsion side against smooth glass.

Glassless negative carriers are much more common and you will see lots of arguments about the merits of both if you search the archives. I made a small and quite unscientific test for myself once and found that the glassless carrier (4x5 negative) made no improvement that I could find. By the same token, a better printer with a better eye might find glass carriers a necessity for producing their best work.

Neal Wydra
 

tkamiya

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My understanding is that glass type will ensure the film is flat, thus improving sharpness across the print. However, I also heard it won't make much practical difference unless you are printing very large using high magnifications, such as doing 16x20 or larger from 35mm negatives. I use glassless kind for 35mm all the way up to 6x8, and print up to 16x20. I haven't seen any issues.
 

Dali

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I also used a glassless carrier for 25 years for both 35mm and 120 negatives and I don't plan to change soon. With glass, the negative might be flatter but I will have for sure to fight against dust. Without glass, I only have to clean both sides of the negative. With glass, I would have to clean 6 surfaces (2 from negative + 4 from carrier)...
 

mr rusty

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Note the type of enlarger makes a difference

Is this not the real answer? enlargers that transfer heat use glass carriers because distortion caused by heat is a potential issue. Enlargers with little heat transmission can use glassless?

I use a Vivitar V1. The unique "light pipe" means no heat transfer at all from light source to neg. The neg carriers are glassless - why introduce more surfaces if they are unnecessary?
 

DREW WILEY

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Glassless won't assure you clean negatives! Dust can still blow around and land on your negative;
and I'd rather have the glass in between to keep minor dust out of focus at least. But from a quality
standpoint, glass is a necessity if you want precise results. If you don't ... that's another story.
 

Paul Howell

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I use glassless in my D 3 for 35mm to 6X9 and glass for 4X5, I have seen some warping with 4X5. I just took down my Durst 601 which had a glass type carrier and did not have issues other than cleaning and dusting more surfaces, when you live the Desert can be a real pain.
 

DREW WILEY

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Yeah, the clay out on some windy playa can really be a nuisance too. For winter desert use, I'd
have a big nail attached to some speaker wire and an alligator clip at the other end, so I could static
ground my Sinar view camera. And, of course, anti-static spray on the filmholders. SLR's, esp MF
ones can be an even bigger headache, because once a little dust gets inside the shutter curtain
and mirror movement drives it where it will inevitable cause trouble. Made me dread changing lenses.
I cut my teeth printing big Cibachromes, which are almost impossible to retouch, so learned to be
very careful with dust, whether in the field or in the darkroom.
 
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