I hope that some of you find this interesting.
Up until the introduction of P121 and Type R paper, reversal prints were being made at Kodak using the Kodachrome process, but on a white acetate support. These early reversal prints were called Kodachrome prints or Kotavachrome by some. They were marked by a relief image just like Kodachrome film, so the gloss looked strange.
Thanks, PE! This is very interesting history. Some of the C and type-R prints I made in the early 80's still look good. I look forward to trying RA.
Is Cibachrome is the only type R process left?
That's sad I remember type R being a lot easier for filtering. Plus, it was more fun to compose on the easel.
I picked up a free pack of Ilfochrome Classic paper this past weekend, but I have no idea how old it is. Does it age as quickly as RA papers?
Also got a half box of Endura metallic and a small bit of Duratrans RA 4007, 11x14. I've never used any of these.
So just to obtain clarification Ektacolor 78 does refer to its year of manufacture. It is a late 1970s paper and if so is likely to be useless?
Thanks
pentaxuser
May I ask about batch consistency?
A lot of the old photo books I've read and a lot of people who printed colour in the '80s have said that the whole process is a hassle because of the need to recalibrate the filtration after each new box of paper. My experience with Endura is that box-to-box consistency is excellent. So I'm wondering is this because of technological advance or because of the diminishing amount of paper being manufactured meaning that all boxes are from the same batch?
So just to obtain clarification Ektacolor 78 does refer to its year of manufacture. It is a late 1970s paper and if so is likely to be useless?
Thanks
pentaxuser
When I started printing color in 1984 Ektacolor 74 and 78 were two of the available papers for home printing. Then it seems sometime in the next year or so they were replaced by Ektacolor Professional and Plus, respectively. So the latest possible date of manufacture for your paper would be the mid 80s. This paper used Ektaprint 2 so you could not succesfully process it today in RA-4.
RPC
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