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Maine-iac

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Friends at Ilford,

I'm a long-time satisfied user of both your film and paper. Thank you for your commitment to black & white photography.

Two requests:

1. Please bring back Delta 400 in 4X5 sheets.

2. Would it be possible to put your Warmtone emulsion on a whiter paper base?
I've used your warmtone since it came out whenever I want a warm-toned print, and I love the emulsion. I'm a fan of shadow detail, and your warm-tone delivers that wonderfully. However, I often want a slightly less warm, more neutral, but not cool-tone effect. For that Agfa's MCC was my paper of choice.
If your warm-tone emulsion were available on a whiter base, the resulting paper would be great!

Larry Kalajainen
 

df cardwell

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Good idea. There is a long tradition, going back through Agfa's Record Rapid and Kodak's Illustrator's Special, of warm blacks and clean whites.

The Warmtone base can be pretty murky at times, and I miss MCC !

don
 

bill schwab

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Maine-iac said:
2. Would it be possible to put your Warmtone emulsion on a whiter paper base?
I agree in comparison to the regular MGIV that the base has a stained and murky look. I actually had complaints on this because the prints looked really stained when mounted to white matt board. It would seem to me though that this has a great deal to do with the warm look of the paper once printed.

Have you tried warming the tone of the MGIV through toning Larry? I've found it works great and I get that nice, white paper base border. I use a very diluted sepia tone coupled with a dash of selenium at the end.

Bill
 

Black Dog

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Me too!
 

David A. Goldfarb

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I'd also use Delta 400 in sheet sizes (2x3", 4x5", 5x7", 8x10", 11x14").
 

Nige

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df cardwell said:
The Warmtone base can be pretty murky at times, and I miss MCC !

Yes, my feelings exactly. I have only purchased one pkt of warmtone for this reason (still haven't used it all either). Same reason I use Agfa Viradon rather then Kodak Sepia toner, the whites are less affected.
 

Robert Hall

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Just call them up. Tell them you want the APUG discount.

hortense said:
What happened to the $50 deduction for Ilford's Silver Conferenence?
 

JohnArs

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I also wanted the Delta 100 and 400 ASA in all sizes up to at least 8x10!
It is very important that a company has the whole sizes up to 8x10 on 400 ASA I take Kodak TMY 400 because i can get it up to 8x10 from 35mm!
I would imidiatly change to Delta if I get it up to 8x10!!!!!!!
Don't like HP 5 so much especially on the smaller sizes!
 
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Maine-iac

Maine-iac

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billschwab said:
Have you tried warming the tone of the MGIV through toning Larry? I've found it works great and I get that nice, white paper base border. I use a very diluted sepia tone coupled with a dash of selenium at the end.

Bill

It's not just the color of the print that I'm after; I switched from MG IV as my standard neutral/cool-toned paper to Agfa MCC because I got much better shadow detail with the Agfa emulsion. I don't know why exactly, since I'm not privy to the details of their emulsion chemistry, but I'd guess it's chloro-bromide vs. straight bromide. I get the same kind of detailed shadows with Ilford's Warm Tone, but the off-white base makes for a different overall effect. I've done comparison prints of the same negative on MG IV, Agfa MCC, and MGWT, and in all cases, the Agfa and the MGWT show detail in the darker shadow areas that MG IV does not. If the detail is there on my neg, I want to see it in the print unless I have an aesthetic reason not to.

I want those detailed luminous shadows that the warmer chlorobromide emulsion gives combined with a slightly cooler overall color that a whiter base provides. I've tried Bergger, Forte, Kentmere, etc., with no luck in finding that combo. That's why toning alone doesn't do it for me.

Larry
 

sanderx1

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JohnArs said:
I also wanted the Delta 100 and 400 ASA in all sizes up to at least 8x10!

Delta 100 is already made in sheet film sizes up to at least 8x10 if not larger.
 

donbga

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JohnArs said:
I also wanted the Delta 100 and 400 ASA in all sizes up to at least 8x10!
It is very important that a company has the whole sizes up to 8x10 on 400 ASA I take Kodak TMY 400 because i can get it up to 8x10 from 35mm!
I would imidiatly change to Delta if I get it up to 8x10!!!!!!!
Don't like HP 5 so much especially on the smaller sizes!
As much as I loved 400 Delta in sheet sizes it isn't an equivalent film to TMAX 400. So all things considered for me I will stick with TMY even if 400 Delta is reintroduced in sheet sizes.

Don Bryant
 

Josef Guay

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I agree with the previous posts that the base of Ilford's warmtone fiber paper is too warm. I would prefere a neutral white base. One reason to use a warmtone paper is to use a gold toner for blue tones. I don't like the look of blue tones over a warm base.
 

Simon R Galley

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OK Guys...you want a cooler warmtone, or was that a warmer cooltone....

Seriously, a whiter base means more optical brighteners, remember its Baryta, that affects the performance of the product, in saying that you know one of the products we are looking at ( R&D only at this stage NOT A PRODUCT ) is a COOLTONE FB, which would be designed with a bright white base.

Regards Simon ILFORD Photo / HARMAN technology.

As to Sheet DELTA 400, I will have a look at the numbers, you guys and gals have got or sheet cutters going crazy....
 

skygzr

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I can only assume that Delta 400 4x5 was dropped because it wasn't making any money for Ilford. Maybe the climate is different now.
 

photo8x10

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I would like to have Delta 400 in 5x7" - 8x10" - or bigger, I've never use Delta films in sheet but only in 35mm and for me are fantastic.
I usually use FP4+ and HP5+ but I hope early to start to use also Delta 100(I find it with difficult in Italy in 8x10).
Best
Stefano
 

Simon R Galley

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Dear All,

Just to let you know I have read it...

Simon ILFORD photo / HARMAN technology Limited :
 

rusty71

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Don't Change MG Warm Tone!

I
I want those detailed luminous shadows that the warmer chlorobromide emulsion gives combined with a slightly cooler overall color that a whiter base provides. I've tried Bergger, Forte, Kentmere, etc., with no luck in finding that combo. That's why toning alone doesn't do it for me.

Larry

I for one, would be really sad to see Ilford MG warm tone changed. We've seen all of AGFA's warm tone papers disappear, particularly Portriga Rapid, and kodak dumped Ektalure. Ilford's offering is exactly what a warmtone paper should be-warm! In fact I remember when it first came out, and a lot of us complained the base was TOO white. Ilford responded by removing the optical brighteners or at least toning them down. I recall washing it for hours to leech out some of the brightener. The regular MGIV tones very well in selenium to a cool color, and MG warmtone splits very nicely in Selenium.
I respect other's opinion, but if you want a neutral or cool tone paper, chlorobromide emulsions are just not your cup of tea. I really like the natural baryta base. It gives images a classic 1930's look.
 

erikg

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Seriously, a whiter base means more optical brighteners, remember its Baryta, that affects the performance of the product....

Regards Simon ILFORD Photo / HARMAN technology.

This has got me thinking, as I have also wished that the warmtone base was a bit brighter sometimes, that there is this product:
http://www.sprintsystems.com/printbrightener.htm

I remember a colleague in grad school using this to brighten up the base of portriga-rapid back in the day. I'm going to give this a go and see what it does with the Ilford warmtone.

In the interest of full disclosure, I do some consulting for Sprint Systems, but frankly I had forgotten that this product was still in their line until now. I'll report back on what I find out.

--best,
Erik
 
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