ortho or litho films

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eddie gunks

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hello all,
i was checking out ultra fine for some film deals when i ran across these http://www.ultrafineonline.com/ulhicoorlifi.html
any one have any experiences with ortho or litho films? i shoot pinhole images so crazy effects are okay. also 16x20 is pretty cheap.....just gives me an excuse to build a 16x20 pinhole camera!:::smile:)))
how do these films work in lens cameras?
thanks for the info.

eddie
 

dancqu

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hello all, i was checking out ultra fine for some film deals when i ran
across these http://www.ultrafineonline.com/ulhicoorlifi.html

any one have any experiences with ortho or litho films? i shoot
pinhole images so crazy effects are okay. also 16x20 is pretty
cheap...gives me an excuse to build a 16x20 pinhole camera!:
how do these films work in lens cameras? thanks for the info.
eddie

A usual place for litho films, which are BTW ortho-chromatic,
is behind a lens in a process camera. The exposed and developed
film is used to 'burn' plates for an offset printing press. So the
film is a part of the lithographic process of printing. I was
employed at just that some years ago.

Litho films are blue and green sensitive only and I'd guess about
the same speed as a VC print paper. For pictorial use employ only
the very lowest of contrast developers. I sure some others can
give more exact information. Dan
 

Michel Hardy-Vallée

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16x20 pinhole... of course! There's a way to make sharp pictures!

I've used Arista APHS film as a positive transparency (cf. in my gallery (there was a url link here which no longer exists)) and in terms of speed and contrast, it's very similar to a standard grade 2 paper when processed in paper developer, according to my step wedges.

What I've noticed is that you really need to snatch the film out of the developer. It builds density rather quickly (and the blacks are OPAQUE!), and if you develop for too long you will just have a muddy result. APHS is ortho, and developed under red safelight was all fine.

If you process as a negative, you would theoretically need less contrast than what a print developer can give you. Speed would be thus probably slower.

I would start by making a small pinhole box, in order to use less film and do more tests. Expose at different EI, use a dilute developer (like Rodinal or HC-110 1+100), and develop for the same time.

Then make a contact print. Make sure that you expose your contact for the minimal time required to give you full black on an unexposed but developed portion of the film. Look at the shadows. When you have the shadow details you need, take note of the EI and look at the highlights. If your highlights are blown out, start over and reduce development time (increase if the opposite). Once you get decent highlights, look again at your shadows and adjust the EI to be in the right ballpark.

Once you find a decent EI and dev time, just build the 16x20 and give it a try.
 
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Nick Zentena

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I don't know that one but the Freestyle I think most use EI 3 or 6.

For developer do a search on the on APHS. You'll find people using anything from highly dilute D-72 to various low contrast special brews.
 
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eddie gunks

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thanks all. mhv, your info was quite helpful. i will buy some of these at these prices....i mean 10 sheets of 16x20 at 16-31$ is worth playing with. what are your opinions on the thickness differences available(.004 or .007 what is regular film thickness?)?
 

Michel Hardy-Vallée

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APHS is very thin compared to ordinary sheet film, and much less stiff than the latter. HP5+, for example, is 0.180 mm (always read the spec sheets!), whereas APHS is 0.004 mm. It's very wobbly, and at 16x20 you will want to tape it properly to a stiff backing (unless of course you exploit wobbliness itself).
 
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dancqu

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APHS is very thin compared to ordinary sheet film,
and much less stiff than the latter. HP5+, for example,
is 0.180 mm (always read the spec sheets!), whereas
APHS is 0.004 mm. It's very wobbly, and at 16x20
you will want to tape it properly to a stiff backing
(unless of course you exploit wobbliness itself).

The emulsions may be that thin. That would be 7/1000
of an inch for the HP5+ and the APHS 16/100,000 of an
inch. I think my math correct; based on 1mm = 1/25
inch. Those films are intended for sticky-back or
vacuum support.

May wish to explore www.valleylitho.com . They've
a large selection of litho films, developers, and, and,
and, ... . Dan
 

Michel Hardy-Vallée

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The emulsions may be that thin. That would be 7/1000
of an inch for the HP5+ and the APHS 16/100,000 of an
inch. I think my math correct; based on 1mm = 1/25
inch. Those films are intended for sticky-back or
vacuum support.

May wish to explore www.valleylitho.com . They've
a large selection of litho films, developers, and, and,
and, ... . Dan

Ah, that makes sense. It's the only thickness measurements I found on the spec sheet. At any rate I sure noticed it's thinner than normal sheet film.

Eddie, two things I thought about: build your 16x20 right away, but instead of putting an entire sheet, just put cut bits of film to figure out your dev/EI. And you can even use a normal 35mm camera to do so, if you can bother with loading it/unloading it in darkness with small bits of film.
 

Harrigan

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I've shot graphic arts film in camera and gotten decent negatives exposing at ei 3 and processing in d76 1:2. Reciprocity will come into play with the slow film and my general rule for starting out is to triple the exposure if you get a meter reading over a minute. Use of a paper or litho film developer will yield very high contrast and limited tonal range which should be expected anyway. Using a dilute film developer about twice as dilute as normal would be a good starting point for printable negatives.
 

PHOTOTONE

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Most, if not all Litho film is as thin as roll film. The process cameras normally used to expose this film to make negatives for burning printing plates universally have a vacuum back for holding the film flat. These cameras are usually built into a wall between the darkroom and the room where the artwork is put behind glass on an easel for exposure. One loads the film under a red safelight in the darkroom on the vacuum back which swings open from the camera like a door on a refrigerator. There are no guides to slide the film under, rather there are marks on the flat back to position the film, the vacuum holds it flat.
 

nworth

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My experience with litho film is limited to Kodak Kodalith III and to the various offerings Freestyle has sold over the years. I have shot it in the camera and I have printed it. Regardless of the processing, it tends toward very high contrast. It is quite possible to get a usable continuous tone negative from these films if you use one of the "document film" developers that are designed to give low contrast with microfilm. Even then, the contrast is much higher than for normal films. This may be useful for alternative processes. When printing, my experience is a bit different from one of the other posters. In Dektol, these films are very contrasty, and they tend toward lithographic black or white with full development. You can a range of continuous tones if you are careful, but the contrast tends to be at the high end of paper contrasts, in my experience. If you dilute the developer or use a low contrast developer, it is easier to get a continuous tone print. The current products from Freestyle seem to be a bit less contrasty than the older Kodak material.
 

Donald Miller

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I have used this material in masking negatives. It is capable of making a continuous tone negative. I used Dektol diluted 1-10 or 1-30 depending on the mask I wanted to make.

Jim Galli has used it as an in camera film, from what I understand, and has devised a developer formulation for that film...I think that it exists somewhere on this site.
 

ricksplace

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Try Rodinal at 1:150. You can develop by inspection with the RED safelight on. I shoot Kodak and Freestyle lith film in my Century and Speed Graphics with good results. I shoot it at iso 5.
 
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