Just curious if others are seeing the significantly increased speed of enlarging papers of today vs old papers...or, is it just my imagination?
Back in the day (about 1974 - 2000, for me) I did all my printing on a Beseler 45MX with an Aristo cold light head doing both contact prints and enlargements on Ilford Ilfobrom, a bit of Ilford Galerie, a bit of Oriental Seagull (the old stuff), and Zone VI Brilliant. When I moved across country in 2000, I donated my stock of about 2,000 sheets of paper to a local high school's photography program.
I started shooting "not analog" in 2000 and just recently (within the past year) got back into shooting film and printing in the darkroom. I still use my Beseler 45MX, but years ago I upgraded the head to an Aristo CL4500 w/V54 tube. This unit requires filters to be placed above the negative in a specific made filter drawer. My favorite printing paper nowadays is Foma Fomabrom Variant 111 and I use either Liquidol or home brewed D-72 for paper developer.
My typical film stocks have all been tested to produce a CI typical for printing with a #2 filter, but I'm finding my print times to be around 5 - 10 secs, even with the light intensity control of the Aristo unit turned down as far as it will go and my enlarging lens set to f/22! This is much too short for any kind of dodging work. In the old days, my printing times ran about 25 - 45 secs with the enlarging lens set, maybe, 2 stops below wide open.
Are today's enlarging papers so much faster than the papers of yore? I'm fully aware of diffraction effects compromising sharpness in a taking lens, but will stopping my enlarging lens down to f/32 or f/45 cause any issues? Any idea how I could "slow" the light down in order to increase my standard print time?
Thanks for any help provided.
Back in the day (about 1974 - 2000, for me) I did all my printing on a Beseler 45MX with an Aristo cold light head doing both contact prints and enlargements on Ilford Ilfobrom, a bit of Ilford Galerie, a bit of Oriental Seagull (the old stuff), and Zone VI Brilliant. When I moved across country in 2000, I donated my stock of about 2,000 sheets of paper to a local high school's photography program.
I started shooting "not analog" in 2000 and just recently (within the past year) got back into shooting film and printing in the darkroom. I still use my Beseler 45MX, but years ago I upgraded the head to an Aristo CL4500 w/V54 tube. This unit requires filters to be placed above the negative in a specific made filter drawer. My favorite printing paper nowadays is Foma Fomabrom Variant 111 and I use either Liquidol or home brewed D-72 for paper developer.
My typical film stocks have all been tested to produce a CI typical for printing with a #2 filter, but I'm finding my print times to be around 5 - 10 secs, even with the light intensity control of the Aristo unit turned down as far as it will go and my enlarging lens set to f/22! This is much too short for any kind of dodging work. In the old days, my printing times ran about 25 - 45 secs with the enlarging lens set, maybe, 2 stops below wide open.
Are today's enlarging papers so much faster than the papers of yore? I'm fully aware of diffraction effects compromising sharpness in a taking lens, but will stopping my enlarging lens down to f/32 or f/45 cause any issues? Any idea how I could "slow" the light down in order to increase my standard print time?
Thanks for any help provided.