Dear All,
I'm looking for an alternative to Kentmere Fineprint FB Glossy in 16x20"/40x50cm, which is the size paper I almost exclusively use for printing 120-size (6x6cm) negatives.
What I like(d) about this paper:
- it dries very flat if taped down to glass (face up),
- it tones very nicely and controllably in Selenium,
- the surface shine after drying is nice (although I prefer a more matte finish- see below),
- how it handles contrasty negs printed at up to grade 2.
What I like less:
- it goes a bit muddy with low-contrast, subtle negatives,
- it doesn't print as well at higher grades (although I usually don't go beyond 3.5 anyway),
- it doesn't have the sparkle & subtleness of good old Agfa MCC 111 (my mainstay up to several years ago),
- I prefer the 'Finegrain' finish (Kentmere lexicon for 'matte') over Glossy, but Finegrain is out of production and out of stock.
So what I'm looking for now is an FB paper that tones well in Selenium, has a Kentmere Finegrain like texture, and has the subtle tonality & excellent low-to-high grade response of Agfa MCC. At the same time I also won't mind trying a warmer-toned paper (read: warmer than Adox MCC 110) that allows room for obtaining different degrees of warmth & tone, as determined by paper developer and toning process.
While money is an issue I will not, in this case, allow it to be. I used to think differently but have recently come to believe that I should save on cameras, lenses, film and chemistry, definitely not on paper.
With all the above in mind I have narrowed down the choice to two papers:
1. Ilford MG FB Warmtone ("24K") Semi-Matt (link to Ag in the UK),
2. Fomabrom Varient 123 (white base, but not super-white, with a Semi-Matt or 'Velvet' texture- link).
I am leaning a tiny (and I mean really tiny!) bit towards the Foma paper because it has good (though limited) rep here and elsewhere, while being cheaper (old habits die hard, sigh) than Ilford. What's holding me back is fear of lack of quality control by Foma. Also, I have not been able to find out if this paper dries flat (if kept taped down during drying), if the thinner base (180 g/m^2 vs. 255 for Ilford) makes a huge difference in handling (kinking) and 'quality-feel', and how 'archival' it is (assuming the fictitious perfect printer). Basically what it comes down to for me with this Foma paper: it looks great on paper (sorry), but how reliable and practical is it in real life?
I have burnt my hands badly and repeatedly on Foma film in 120, while I have only praise for Ilford products (or what I've tried at least) and for their service- Simon is terrific. Hence my doubts about the Foma brand.
So my limbo relates to:
(1) how the ideal-world, on-paper qualities of the respective papers turn out in real life, and
(2) doubts about quality control in the case of Foma.
I welcome comments (preferably personal user experience) on either paper. I'm also open to suggestions outside the two.
BTW, I'm in Netherlands, where it is not possible to obtain either paper at a good price (or at all). I am willing to spend money, but it should be for the paper first and foremost, not for the shop owner- no offence to anyone. Therefore I will order from the UK, probably from Ag (I love their website for the commitment it radiates). Shipment to Netherlands is GBP 17. This means that I will want to think twice before ordering, and if I do, I'd rather order for a substantial amount (100-200 euros/GBP). IOW, I want to get it sort-of-right first time ordering, for which I need you fellow APUG'ers feedback on these papers!
PS. I prefer replies based on actual personal user experience, not so much from what others/books/pdf's say.
Thanks a lot for reading/answering this somewhat convoluted post!!!
Best, Sander
I'm looking for an alternative to Kentmere Fineprint FB Glossy in 16x20"/40x50cm, which is the size paper I almost exclusively use for printing 120-size (6x6cm) negatives.
What I like(d) about this paper:
- it dries very flat if taped down to glass (face up),
- it tones very nicely and controllably in Selenium,
- the surface shine after drying is nice (although I prefer a more matte finish- see below),
- how it handles contrasty negs printed at up to grade 2.
What I like less:
- it goes a bit muddy with low-contrast, subtle negatives,
- it doesn't print as well at higher grades (although I usually don't go beyond 3.5 anyway),
- it doesn't have the sparkle & subtleness of good old Agfa MCC 111 (my mainstay up to several years ago),
- I prefer the 'Finegrain' finish (Kentmere lexicon for 'matte') over Glossy, but Finegrain is out of production and out of stock.
So what I'm looking for now is an FB paper that tones well in Selenium, has a Kentmere Finegrain like texture, and has the subtle tonality & excellent low-to-high grade response of Agfa MCC. At the same time I also won't mind trying a warmer-toned paper (read: warmer than Adox MCC 110) that allows room for obtaining different degrees of warmth & tone, as determined by paper developer and toning process.
While money is an issue I will not, in this case, allow it to be. I used to think differently but have recently come to believe that I should save on cameras, lenses, film and chemistry, definitely not on paper.
With all the above in mind I have narrowed down the choice to two papers:
1. Ilford MG FB Warmtone ("24K") Semi-Matt (link to Ag in the UK),
2. Fomabrom Varient 123 (white base, but not super-white, with a Semi-Matt or 'Velvet' texture- link).
I am leaning a tiny (and I mean really tiny!) bit towards the Foma paper because it has good (though limited) rep here and elsewhere, while being cheaper (old habits die hard, sigh) than Ilford. What's holding me back is fear of lack of quality control by Foma. Also, I have not been able to find out if this paper dries flat (if kept taped down during drying), if the thinner base (180 g/m^2 vs. 255 for Ilford) makes a huge difference in handling (kinking) and 'quality-feel', and how 'archival' it is (assuming the fictitious perfect printer). Basically what it comes down to for me with this Foma paper: it looks great on paper (sorry), but how reliable and practical is it in real life?
I have burnt my hands badly and repeatedly on Foma film in 120, while I have only praise for Ilford products (or what I've tried at least) and for their service- Simon is terrific. Hence my doubts about the Foma brand.
So my limbo relates to:
(1) how the ideal-world, on-paper qualities of the respective papers turn out in real life, and
(2) doubts about quality control in the case of Foma.
I welcome comments (preferably personal user experience) on either paper. I'm also open to suggestions outside the two.
BTW, I'm in Netherlands, where it is not possible to obtain either paper at a good price (or at all). I am willing to spend money, but it should be for the paper first and foremost, not for the shop owner- no offence to anyone. Therefore I will order from the UK, probably from Ag (I love their website for the commitment it radiates). Shipment to Netherlands is GBP 17. This means that I will want to think twice before ordering, and if I do, I'd rather order for a substantial amount (100-200 euros/GBP). IOW, I want to get it sort-of-right first time ordering, for which I need you fellow APUG'ers feedback on these papers!
PS. I prefer replies based on actual personal user experience, not so much from what others/books/pdf's say.
Thanks a lot for reading/answering this somewhat convoluted post!!!
Best, Sander

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