studiocarter
Member
I just bought 6 rolls of Arista
If Foma has a load of thias backing paper then so does Rollei/Maco as they use the same paper, same feel, same printing style and same hole, never been a problem to me, with any of my folders, and I have a lot from Ensign,Zeiss,Balda,Voightlande, 645,66,and 69, also some feanka's, in at least 10 years of using foma films, indeed, I developed a roll from my latest batch and left the window shutter open while winding the film to the end, yes, the hole is their, but well away from the last negative, must be a problem with the user not the film, surely if there was a big problem them more here would be complaining?I know that Simon Galley once stated that there was only one remaining manufacturer of backing paper, but it seems that the black paper used by Foma looks and feels quite different from the Kodak backing. Does Foma just have a lot of old paper floating around?
Let us see the picture please.i emailed and got a response within an hour or so. the email included an image of the backing paper
which will have markings for 6x6, 6x9 and 6x4.5 ... i think. still not really very helpful for folks who use
other formats. i wrote back but haven't received anything in return.
Let us see the picture please.
V0igtlander Bessa,s must pull a lot of weight over at Kodak.Kodak sent me an email. They say they are no, well, to quote: "
Dear Mr. Carter,
We are in the process of printing backing paper with an added frame number track for Voigtlander Bessa 6x9 cameras. See below. The very bottom track is the one we have added back.
Here is the photo of what they sent to me:
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Here is a photo of paper, (PX125), with my window outlined, which I immediately sent back to them:
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Are they adding the correct row or not? I specifically asked for the inner track in my initial inquiry.
What I wrote:
Hello,
New 400TMY no longer has 9 rows of numbers. I tried to use my Voigtlander Bessa 6x9 / 6x4.5 that has two red Windows in a line not on the edge and not in the center. No numbers could be seen. A piece of one was seen way out of frame. TX is the same.
Lightness of the ink is not the issue here. The numbers are gone entirely.
Please put them back.
Thank you.
1013 views at the time of writing this post.
OK (since a luncheon excursion was canceled)
View attachment 164743
Note the competition has the multiple rows of numbers.
Also, not obvious in this scan, but the Fuji paper is whiter and has a glossier surface, as in maybe they have a different source (their printing is darker too).
As an old coworker used to say "Ah wish ah understood all ah know about this here thang."
Thanks for posting the film backing scans. They are most helpful.
After running a roll of Ilford through a new Ondu and not being able to see the numbers I went out and bought a roll of everything available to try and figure out whose frame numbers and paper color provided enough contrast for me to pick out the numbers or at least a darkening where they were but haven't gotten around to exposing any of those rolls. It looks like I am going to have to bight the bullet and spend the extra $ on Fuji.
I agree with TMY2 being a gold standard but it is a subjective choice;my all-time favorite for bodyscapes and portraits though.I've been waiting for the TMY2 bleed problem to disappear completely before I order more, but now, if the numbers have truly disappeared, I will be ordering no more TMY2. Many of my cameras have the "ruby window" and that means Delta 100 and Delta 400 are now going to totally replace Kodak for me. Not a problem since I like both of the Delta's, but still think TMY2 was the "Gold Standard" when it comes to ISO 400.
I have acquired an old Rolleicord from the 1930's that has the red window on the bottom. If you hold the camera with its back to your chest and the lens pointing forward, then tilt the camera forward so you can see the bottom, the red window is on the left. That means it lines up with the numbers for 6X9, not 6X6 (which would required having a window on the right). Did 120 films in the 1930's have 6X6 numbers on the left?
I have acquired an old Rolleicord from the 1930's that has the red window on the bottom. If you hold the camera with its back to your chest and the lens pointing forward, then tilt the camera forward so you can see the bottom, the red window is on the left. That means it lines up with the numbers for 6X9, not 6X6 (which would required having a window on the right). Did 120 films in the 1930's have 6X6 numbers on the left?
Forget about using 400-TMY T-Max 120 film in an old folder. There are no numbers on the paper backing. The little red window cannot be used to wind the film. Grrrrrr!
Are there any other surprises?
PE:Could you scan a sample of this paper and post it. I would be most interested in its appearance. I cannot verify any other instance of this other than this thread.
Thanks.
PE
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