Kino
Subscriber
Check your weather forecast for the UV index. That helps when I printed Cyanotypes in the Sun...
Check your weather forecast for the UV index. That helps when I printed Cyanotypes in the Sun...
Is it UV-sensitive as a way to make a vegan film stock? Or did you find a suitable gelatin substitute and decided to make a UV film?We now have 35mm UV-sensitive film available and in stock. It's very low ISO (10 mins with the sun out), but high resolution. Developing there are 2 options - remove it immediately from the camera and develop with heat (contrast fades within minutes) for a negative. Or give it a couple of weeks, flash with a high brightness UV light and develop with heat for a positive. We can provide the positive processing if needed through our custom machine that includes a UV lamp and a heat drum. It's a very impractical way of taking photos, but a lot of fun, and no animal products as not emulsion based so great for vegans. For anyone interested please drop us an email through sales@jacrofilm.com .
Is it UV-sensitive as a way to make a vegan film stock? Or did you find a suitable gelatin substitute and decided to make a UV film?
The wikipedia article about vesicular film gives a good oversight about the working, the capabilities and the avaibility of this product: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vesicular_film
After reading it, I would like to ask Jacro what exactly they mean by "now have avaible and in stock".
Is this some old stock they slit? If so, what quantity are we talking about? (As in for how many years do they think the supply would last.)
I doubt somebody will ramp up a production, given the market once this product was intended to be produced en masse did drift logn ago to more practical products. But who knows? (I wildly guess it is a lot easier to produce compared to coating silver emulsion and that it can use the infrastructure of existing plastic foil plants, making it wort even for not so large batches.)
How does Jacro's warning to not store this product near argentic emulsions correlate with the mention in the wikipedia article about an improved second version of Kalvar to eliminate the outgassing of HCl? I hope it is not considered badmouthing to arise the suspicion this is some stock that was dropped for being from the corrosive production.
Hi SMD
It’s new old stock, plenty of it, produced long after that issue. But as a precaution we referenced storing it separately anyway.
Please let us know if you have any other questions.
Thanks!
Thank you. Do you intend to produce new stock or think this could be possible with the giveness of today?
This seems to me the most obvious approach:am UK based should i just email you to order?
For anyone interested please drop us an email through sales@jacrofilm.com .
This seems to me the most obvious approach:
Hi i am really interested to try some of this film - am UK based should i just email you to order?
I stuck a video using Jacro UV film in this thread...
Curious to see how duplicating colour negatives to positive on this black and white could work and the contrast changes.
It's UV-sensitive material, so I imagine that duplicating color negatives may end up being a rather disappointing endeavor.
Do colour negatives potentially not mask UV?
Yes, but the question is 'how' - both in a qualitative and a quantitative sense. In a quantitative sense, the answer is probably going to be "a heck of a lot". In a qualitative sense, you may be faced with surprisingly low contrast, because essentially the entire negative pretty much blocks most UV with less distinction than you might expect. The results may also be quite surprising, with e.g. the yellow dye turning out to form a very contrasty image, while cyan may not do much at all. So the results may be quite different from what you imagine. Whether that's a good thing...only you can decide based on an experiment.
FWIW, you would also be wise to avoid T-Max 100 black and white film, because it has a built in UV blocker.
Only the sheet film product though, AFAIK. In 135 and 120 it doesn't have this.
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links. To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here. |
PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY: ![]() |