Super-sized contacts/proofs - how to do it?

df cardwell

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WarEaglemtn

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They are projection proofs. You can do 35mm, 9 frames at a time using a 4x5 enlarger. A glass negative carrier is needed. Align the 9 frames in the carrier, insert it in the enlarger and project them onto your paper of whatever size you want. Look good and works well. Very easy to do.

If you want a full roll of 35mm film done at one time you will need an 8x10 to 10x10 enlarger to do so.

Other than aligning the negatives in the glass carrier it is no different than making a normal enlargement from a negative. Use a glass carrier to make sure the negatives are flat. If not the curvature of some will make it impossible to get a sharp image of the negative.
 

rcam72

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I'm a little late to the party but I just came across this in B and H's used section:

Saunders 8x10" Professional Multi-Print Enlarging Easel Mfr # 155031

http://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/800607900-USE/Saunders_155031_8x10_Professional_Multi_Print_Enlarging.html

"With this easel, you can produce multiple images on a single sheet of 8x10" paper. It's light-tight so focusing, cropping, or changing negatives or filter settings are easily done under a dim white light (25W max). Comes with masks for making two 5x7", four 4x5", four 31/2x5", eight 21/2x31/2"(wallet-size) prints (all with borders). Leave the mask off to print a single 8x10". Click-stop control knobs position the paper on a moving carriage for each consecutive exposure.

• Multiple prints on a single sheet without moving the easel
• Easel remains stationary while paper carrier moves
• Accepts standard 8x10" paper and comes complete with a full set of light-tight hinged cup masks
• Cups are recessed to the focal plane to permit accurate focusing withthe paper in the easel
• Prints (8) wallets, (4) 31/2x5", (2) 5x7", (1) 8x10" all with borders
"

It sounds like something the OP was looking for.
 

Michel Hardy-Vallée

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I'm a little late to the party but I just came across this in B and H's used section:

Saunders 8x10" Professional Multi-Print Enlarging Easel Mfr # 155031

This is looking like the kind of setup school photographers would have used to make these sheets where you had one 5x7, a few 3x4, and a load of 2x3 or some similar combination.

I always hated cutting all these bloody pictures!
 

rcam72

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Could you scan the negatives? That's what I do when I want a better look at what I'm working with. I have an Epson 4490 that allows for the scanning of selected negatives and not the whole roll. Then I'll look it over on the monitor to decide if it is something I want to work with in the darkroom. Printing super-size proofs should be no problem once the image is in your computer.

Raul
 

John R.

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It's easy to make enlarged proof sheets of any size if you use a neg carrier designed to hold multiple strips. One example that I have used for many years is a Saunders 18 frame sliding carrier. Mine is used in a Omega 4x5 enlarger with a cold light head. The carrier holds six short film strips that are made up of three frames each or it will hold 3 long strips that are made up of six frames each. You can just use one strip of anywhere from one frame up to six frames if you want. You would have to mask off the rest of the carrier in a situation like that. The Saunders carrier is all aluminum and hinged. It has an acrylic type base plate that is designed to fit a particular enlarger design. This carrier can print a gang of 3 strips at once (Nine 35 mm frames) with a 4x5 enlarger. Then you just slide the carrier to either side to print the other 3 strips (nine frames). I used this carrier for years in my commercial lab. It is very well made and if you want to do enlarged 35mm proofs with a 4x5 enlarger you can't be this carrier. It is fast and easy to use. All frames and strips perfectly align with no fuss which results in completely professional enlarged 35mm proofs.
 

thedancefloor

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Anybody know of a lab, preferably in Canada, that will make super proofs? And is it possible for them to correct for the density of a few frames here and there?
 

Mike Wilde

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Like John R says a few posts above. I have sparingly used carrier that lets me print 3 rows of 6 frames of 35mm ( 3 rows of 3 frames at a time) in a 4x5 enlarger. It is of limited use to me, as I store my 35mm negs in rows of 5, 7 rows to a page in plastic 'print file' pages. It is handy for the occasional arty print. One of my upcoming postcard exchage images, of a bunch of head shots printed on the same page was done with this carrier.
 

WarEaglemtn

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Contact prints are the same size as the negative you use. Want bigger ones, shoot with a bigger camera.

Enlarged projection proofs are not contact prints. They are enlarged by projecting negatives on the paper. A glass 4x5 negative holder will do 9 frames(35mm film) on 8x10 paper just fine. Each about the size of a wallet print.

In digital files there is no such thing as a contact print no matter how much the pixelographers try to tell you it is.
 

sharperstill

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PhotoTechnica here in Sydney used to offer "roll proofs". A long piece of paper with images about 3"x4" on it. They went bust. Maybe Vision Image Lab (now in Redfern) do it?
 

Reinhold

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I'm mostly a medium format and large format guy.
But every once in a while my Nikon comes into play and I want proofs that are big enough to actually see.
Back in 1990 I made a carrier for my 4x5 Beseler to enlarge 3 strip of 3 negatives onto a sheet of 8x10 paper.

I resurrected the idea, and put the Mark II version in the classified section.
Take a look...
(there was a url link here which no longer exists)

Reinhold
www.Re-inventedPhotoEquip.com
www.classicBWphoto.com
 

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removed account4

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that is the coolest !
and your viewing things are beautiful enough to use as a frame

john

ps. great website with your reinvented "stuff"


 
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