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Will you be offering optical prints to you customers?
Unlikely, this is more for my personal work. Though we are soon going to be offering pigment prints up to 24".
Will you be offering optical prints to you customers?
Unlikely, this is more for my personal work.
Okay, thanks. I was hoping we (the analog community) would have another source for optical color prints.
Gotcha. My enlarger is an LPL 4550XL with a VCCE (BW) module. I considered a dichro and could presumably purchase that module but the complexity of maintaining RA4 chemicals was more than I’m interested in. My personal taste has now veered toward pigment prints for color anyway. It allows me to easily make gorgeous and detailed prints from E6 film, which even when I was printing in a color darkroom I never had the opportunity to do. RA4 prints do have a quality to them, but at some point you have to pick a horse. *shrug*
Really have the formulas changed??I received my copy today. This is a great book. Not just a bunch of formulas. I have some good reading now and for years to come. Highly recommend buying this valuable book.
It's because GB Sterling is in the toilet!I never understand why it is cheaper to order a book from the UK than from North America.
It's still new to me so I won't give a review. It's NOT a cookbook, it goes into history of previous and current films and developers, talk about how things work. It's going to be one of those books that it's best to buy now, like Tim Rudman's famous toning book.Really have the formulas changed??
What reading are you talking about??
I received my copy today. This is a great book. Not just a bunch of formulas. I have some good reading now and for years to come. Highly recommend buying this valuable book.
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The fact is, I'm unlikely to ever go larger than 11x14 from a 4x5 negative, and I'm contact printing 8x10. Perhaps I should just use XTol straight... I was hoping to use Pyrocat HD, but maybe I should just use that for roll film formats where the degree of enlargement is less...
I've been reading my copy. Great stuff.
I notice that one or both of the authors is pretty bearish on on Jobo processing of B&W film. Certainly I understand the arguments in some cases, but it's acknowledged that when it comes to sheet film even 4x5 wouldn't necessarily show any deficiencies until a 40x50 enlargement. Personally the convenience of expert drums cannot be understated for those (most users) who have no access to dip and dunk processors or 'deep tank' systems. .
This is a subject that has interested me for many years. I've developed film in tanks, in trays, in nitrogen burst, in Jobo's. What I am curious about is what constant agitation does to midtones compared to more traditional development where there is no movement for 50 seconds in every minute. We can easily control total development time by testing a zone VIII neg and adjusting until we get somewhere near 1:30 but what happens to the midtone contrast in the two development scenarios is what interests me. I am getting a densitometer (the 3rd in this lifetime) soon and might start testing for this.
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