snusmumriken
Subscriber
I've been trying out Kodak Double-X lately. On-line reviews have suggested it is not great in bright contrasty conditions because the highlights tend to run away. So of course I was curious to try it in such conditions. October sunshine in Paris provided the opportunity. The film coped very well, far better than I expected. But I re-discovered what I should have anticipated: why most modern films have an anti-halation layer.
So then I wondered why the pressure plate isn't somehow coated to reduce the light reflected back through the film backing. This photo was taken on an (old) Leica M6, in which the pressure plate is a plain smooth sheet. I remembered that my old Nikon FE had a textured pressure plate. I never wondered why. Is there in fact anything that the camera manufacturer can do to reduce halation, and if so, why don't all manufacturers do it?
So then I wondered why the pressure plate isn't somehow coated to reduce the light reflected back through the film backing. This photo was taken on an (old) Leica M6, in which the pressure plate is a plain smooth sheet. I remembered that my old Nikon FE had a textured pressure plate. I never wondered why. Is there in fact anything that the camera manufacturer can do to reduce halation, and if so, why don't all manufacturers do it?
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