This era's Portriga equivalent?

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eric

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I'm home today nursing a sick kid. So in between cycles, I'm scanning some old portriga prints (my original project when I got this scanner 3-4 years ago!).

What is today's equivalent?

Also, anyone use that charcoal finish on Luminos? My local pusher has some on sale.
 

David A. Goldfarb

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Charcoal R is interesting stuff, but it's not Portriga. I tried some and I found there was a really narrow range between too flat and too contrasty. I love the surface, which is like watercolor paper. I think that if you used it for a while and targeted negatives specifically to it, it would be an interesting paper to use.
 
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eric

eric

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David A. Goldfarb said:
used it for a while and targeted negatives specifically to it, it would be an interesting paper to use.

Can you give an example as to what kind of negs? I don't have a densinometer and I don't really understand any of that. I need help like "a little over or a little under" in terms of negs.
 

jim appleyard

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David A. Goldfarb said:
Charcoal R is interesting stuff, but it's not Portriga. I tried some and I found there was a really narrow range between too flat and too contrasty. I love the surface, which is like watercolor paper. I think that if you used it for a while and targeted negatives specifically to it, it would be an interesting paper to use.


I found the same. It took quite a few test strips from each neg to get it right. Portriga, no, but the Charcoal R is nice paper.
 

David A. Goldfarb

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I didn't test it enough to really decide, but my instinct would be that a slightly flatter neg might do better on Charcoal R. Maybe reduce processing time 10% as a starting point.
 
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