We supply a very good booklet with the Emulsion. It is also downloadable from the website (link above). Lina made some short Instagram reels videos. She will eventually be making a proper youtube video too.
Thanks. Is the Supersafe darkroom light available in 110-120v? I see 230. If not, can you tell us the recommended nm for a safelight with this emulsion?
At this point, I'll rejoice for the introduction of any new photo papers--hard stop. My post was a reminder that a lithable silver chloride paper was the raison d'etre of the new PW. It would be a shame if that goal isn't realized after over a decade of development.
On the balance of probabilities, a hand-coated, single grade, non-supercoated emulsion is more likely to lith than one that has all the additives necessary to turn it into a high performance variable contrast paper suitable for multilayer coating.
We supply a very good booklet with the Emulsion. It is also downloadable from the website (link above). Lina made some short Instagram reels videos. She will eventually be making a proper youtube video too.
Thanks. Is the Supersafe darkroom light available in 110-120v? I see 230. If not, can you tell us the recommended nm for a safelight with this emulsion?
Its about finding diodes which emitt a very narrow spectrum and are manufactured/selected with the necessary QC. We never thought about selling it with 110V. I will inquire with the German diode manufacturer and get back to you.
Mirko, just in case that isn't a typo, note that nominal line voltage here in the U.S. and Canada is 120 V, not 130 V. Standards allow a range of 114 V to 126 V.
Sal, thanks for pointing this out. This lamp is resistant between 100 and 130V. The equalizer (Gleichrichter) can handle this. A slightly lower voltage is always possible.
Received my emulsion from germany today. Can't wait to get into the darkroom for experimenting with it. But i guess first i'll have to coat and dry a few paper sheets overnight... so i can hopefuly do some prints over the weekend. I'm very curious!
Darkroom Printing On Fabric with The ADOX Polywarmtone Emulsion
Review by Lina Bessonova
"Printing with the ADOX Polywamtone emulsion on textiles! A product with a long crazy history, finally came to life in a form which allows limitless creativity! It can be coated on bricks, papers, even walls! But in this video, I am focusing on textiles. I made a bunch of prints on tote bags, pouches and jackets from 35mm film, with a lot of mistakes along the way... and this is how this video came to life The emulsion itself is soooo beautiful. Sharpness, depth of blacks, and the legendary warm tone."
I think it is really good PR that Lina doesn't hide that she works for Adox (or is heavily affililate, so to speak). And same time maintaing what I think was a quite honest review. Well done!