From Andrew Moxom: "While I normally stay out of such things on a public forum, something does not smell right here. So all enlarging papers are now considered dinosaurs and of inferior quality. While I applaud people for resurrecting emulsions that have gone away, the elitism I see in this thread is just pure unfounded snobbery. I'll stick with my enlarging papers for now until those who can buy 3k or 5k worth of the new paper to beta test lodima so the manufacturers can iron out the wrinkles. I'll continue to make inferior prints on mature and proven emulsions in the meantime. Each to their own I guess."
I would gladly try this paper, but is there really enough proof to say that it's superior to anything else out there, and why the hype?? I sense an attitude of if you don't contact print on this, you aren't a real photographer.... my .02"
Have you ever tried, Andrew, making contact prints on silver chloride paper? If you have not, then your comments are totally worthless. If you have, and have not achieved superior results, then perhaps you did not know how to print on this paper. While printing is printing and most things are basically the same, printing on silver chloride paper differs in that 1) conventional print developers (Dektol and others) do not give pleasing tones, and 2) developing times are significantly shorter than with enlarging papers (except for the "Canadian" Grade 2 Azo, which doesn't count here).
In my first article about silver chloride papers, published in View Camera in 1996, i mentioned that from time to time over a number of years, I had tried printing on silver chloride paper, but could never make a good print from it. I knew my prints on enlarging paper, which were good prints to most eyes (they were collected in many museums and by many collectors), were lacking something--but I did not know what they were lacking. In 1975, when I met Dody Thompson, Edward Weston's last assistant and she looked at my photographs, she said that while my prints were indeed fine prints, something was missing. She then proceeded to get out and show me about 100 of Edward Weston's prints. Putting them side by side with my prints, it was obvious that something was missing in my prints, and I knew that the only thing it could be was silver chloride paper, of which then, there were only two still being manufactured: Azo and Velox. I tried them both again (I had tried them previously from time to time, but could not get a good print from them, not knowing I needed shorter developing times), did not like the blue color of Velox and decided to print on Azo. Eventually, some years later, I reprinted all of my negatives that had been printed on enlarging paper onto Azo. The difference was astonishing. Not only was were the Azo prints more beautiful--longer scale, deeper blacks, but because of the long scale of the Azo paper only about 20% of the dodging and burning was necessary. The prints were better, and easier to print. I did not, and still do not, see anything wrong with that. One comment I received a long time ago was from someone who said that printing on Azo made him feel guilty, because it was so easy.
In my experience (I grant you, maybe it is not wide enough), in every case where I have seen a print from the same negative made on enlarging paper and on silver chloride paper, the silver chloride paper is more beautiful. It is richer tones, deeper blacks, and more subtle grays (more separation ion the mid grays). And those whose prints they are agree with this assessment.
This is no "Beta Test." I have been testing new silver chloride emulsions for well over five years. The "pre-production" run we had last year could be considered the Beta Test. Everyone who ordered the paper received no more than one box. But this large run is not a Beta Test,
Now, we are ready to make the largelrun of paper. (I will first be testing a proper grade 2 first. The pre-production run was a grade 3, although it was billed as a grade 2. We will have a proper grade 2.) We need lots of order of the paper to us is high in any case as the manufacturer needs to recover their R&D costs). If I had the money I would put the entire sum up myself, but I do not. So we need lots of orders.
In closing, if you make contact prints and want to keep printing on enlarging paper, just do so, but please, if you do not know what you are talking about, keep your absurd accusations of "unfounded snobbery" to yourself.
Michael A. Smith