Mackinaw
Member
Just got mine about five minutes ago via Fed Ex. Hope to make a few prints this weekend of a recent trip to California.
Jim Bielecki
Jim Bielecki
When evaluating this paper with a second negative I found it appears to have a farily long toe and might benefit from pre-exposure, with only 5 sheets I didn't get to try this myself.
I'm interested to know whether others agree with this assessment and if anyone tries pre/post-exposing their samples.
Interesting. I found AgfaPhoto MCC to have the shortest toe of any paper still available at the time of its discontinuance when AgfaPhoto folded. I would rate it even shorter than that of Kentmere FinePrint and almost as short as Kodak PC III. I later read in PhotoTechniqueues that they, too, found it to be short-toed.
Curiously, Agfa's own data sheets showed a characterisitc curve that appeared to include a rather long toe, much as you describe.
It seems to me (I might be mistaken, of course) that if a paper has a short toe then it would need pre-exposure more often. The long toe sounds like a attribute of a photographic material that gives softer highlights and, therefore, will need pre-exposure less often...
Multigrade papers usually need pre-exposure more often than graded ones because of the fact that they are made out of two (or more) hard emulsions (with different spectral sensitivities) and the gradation is made up by the superimposition of two hard emulsion curves (one of them will be underexposed in case we print with a soft - yellow - filter). The problem is that the change occurs mainly in the middle tones and the shadows, leaving the highlights as they were (they are not affected that much from the underexposure), that is hard. This is a general rule for variable contrast papers, although many manufacturers have tried to solve it with various degrees of success (Ilford has made a good job out of it). I think that the new paper might suffer a LITTLE bit more from this VC-paper syndrome than the old, and this might be caused by the whiter base and not by a difference in the papers formula.
Anyway, I think that whoever might need a paper with a really good response to smooth highlight gradation has to opt for a graded one...
I just hope it will be available in this country and if it is, at a price I can afford.
Mick.
Has anybody tried to tone this new ADOX 111 yet?
I recall Agfa MCC as being very receptive to taking on a nice brown tone with bleach/sepia or polysulfide toning, but it's response to selenium was minimal.
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