I am going to miss the cold tone of Polymax FB paper. I have used Seagull in the past but found it to be kind of dull compared to Polymax. What do you Polymax users plan to use as a replacement?
I only recently tried Polymax Fine Art when I got stuck in a jam and bought from a local place that only sells Kodak. It truly is a beautiful paper and its a shame Kodak has given us an open hand slap by killing it. With that being said, I also have heard that Kentmere makes a similar paper so I plan on giving that a try.
I don't want to rain on the parade but Polymax has incorporated developers and it will not remain in suspension forever in the freezer. Sorry.....
Best, Peter
Ref. The Great Paper/Developer Shoot-Out by Bruce Barlow.
View Camera March/April &May/June 2004
Bruce Barlow was a student of Fred Picker and did his video on printing. Even though the referenced article was poorly written, I suspect his evaluation has some substance. As a result I found that print development of 3-minutes is of value. Here's his rating:
BEST PAPERS (toned)
BEST DEVELOPERS (toned prints)
Warm toned ranking
1. Agfa Multiclassic (45¢ 8x10 sheet) Bergger Silver Supreme
($2.75 8 x 10 sheet)
Clayton Ultra Cold Tone liquid (6-min.)
Clayton Ultra Cold Tone liquid (2-min.)
Mid. Ilford Multigrade Fiberbase VC (neutral)
1st ranked Ilford Multigrade (2-min)
3rd ranked Dektol (2-min.)
Neutral to slightly cold toned:
Forte Elegance Polygrade V VC (52¢ 8x10 sheet)
Dektol powder (2-min.)
Polymax FA VC for womens portraits (57¢ 8 x 10 sheet)
Edwal Ultra Black liquid liquid (2-min)
Coldest Paper
Oriental Seagull VC.
Ewal Platinum II liquid (2-min.)
Miscellaneous Information
All papers have roughly the same speed except Ilford Galerie?
(Polymax vs. Ilford MGV?)
Ilford Galerie is 2-stops slower than other papers.
Developers required different toning times.
Six minutes vs. 2-minutes reduced exposure time.
16-oz. glass coke bottles for developer storage.
Hortense- I know Mr. Barlow quite well. He was not a student of Fred Picker. He was actually involved with the Zone VI Company at one time.He was brought in to help "fix" some problems they were having. He and Richard Ritter
give the Fine Focus Workshops up in Vermont several times a year.
Best, Peter Schrager
Hortense- I know Mr. Barlow quite well. He was not a student of Fred Picker. He was actually involved with the Zone VI Company at one time.He was brought in to help "fix" some problems they were having. He and Richard Ritter
give the Fine Focus Workshops up in Vermont several times a year.
Best, Peter Schrager