some people used a soft dusting of anti newton powder.
I've just got a quarter plate Gnome enlarger with a glass carrier and also have a Kodak Precision glass carrier. Neither seem to be AN glass.
How did old time printers manage to avoid Newton Rings while using non AN glass?
The retouching surface once put on some films functioned as anti Newton material.Anti Newton Ring capability is designed into some emulsion coating.
And I said the same thing three whole minutes before Bob did. A lot of us old timers on Photrio today.Chatting with another old-timer at Wings Camera in Atlanta somehow that topic came up. He said that they used a dusting of corn starch on glass carriers to prevent Newton's Rings. So Bob Carnie wasn't just blowing smoke!
BTW, Wings Camera has been in business over one hundred years! They have a large selection of used gear, from 35mm up to 8 x 10 view cameras, and dark room gear. They also carry film, chemicals, paper, etc. Good people!
Both Plus-X Pan Prof. PXP-120 and Tri-X Pan Professional TXP also had a retouching "tooth".But a retouching surface was more rough. Howewer that was no issue as it was applied only at sheet films for portraits anyways.
some people used a soft dusting of anti newton powder.
So that was what that black piece of paper cut to 4x5 was for that came with my Beseler 4x5 glass neg carrier.Your do not want the glossy side of the film to touch the glass. So you cut a small mask from black carton or black pvc sheet and cut out your negative size plus a little more. This you place on your negative and then you close your negative carrier.
Attached pictures show such a mask that I made for the negative holders of the Focomat 1c and the Valoy II.
That is how many printers dit it and still do.
But using a spacer frame would not be that effective as a glass sandwich.
Yes, but still the industry (e.g.Kaiser) offer both, pairs of format mask that act like such a spacer and combos of a mask and an AN glass.[The mask] only has to keep [the negative] flat within the depth of field
Your do not want the glossy side of the film to touch the glass. So you cut a small mask from black carton or black pvc sheet and cut out your negative size plus a little more. This you place on your negative and then you close your negative carrier.
Attached pictures show such a mask that I made for the negative holders of the Focomat 1c and the Valoy II.
That is how many printers dit it and still do.
I used the powder for years on the Lisle Camera to place trans or negs onto clear vacuum glass.. very tricky procedure to just put enough powder down without it showing up in the montage and enough to stop the dreaded Newton Rings... as we were using vacuum to hold the images to the glass it was a very tricky balance.Chatting with another old-timer at Wings Camera in Atlanta somehow that topic came up. He said that they used a dusting of corn starch on glass carriers to prevent Newton's Rings. So Bob Carnie wasn't just blowing smoke!
BTW, Wings Camera has been in business over one hundred years! They have a large selection of used gear, from 35mm up to 8 x 10 view cameras, and dark room gear. They also carry film, chemicals, paper, etc. Good people!
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