BrianShaw
Member
dot, dot, dot.
Gimme a simple answer! History or not?
If using old film in the affected lot numbers (or earlier)... apparently not.
If using film subsequent to the affected lot numbers... maybe history.
dot, dot, dot.
Gimme a simple answer! History or not?
im really sad no one has offered to give me their bad-film
Gimme a simple answer! History or not?
Nothing is proven until the same roll is processed two different ways. Until then, we are just speculating that the presoak is the solution.
... and just as mysterious... whatever is going on with the heretofore unidentifiable backing paper supplier and/or backing paper ink and/or backing paper printer folks!bill,
since the #s don't align with anything
i am going for the alien contact theory
and maybe this is why EK/KA won't talk about it
and PE is sworn to secrecy as well.
aliens from a place far away have been providing
the film industry with pre-exposed/numbered
film and have been holding key emulsion scientists hostage
in a vessel someplace else so nothing can be solved.
the only way for EK/KA to fix this is to present these
non benevolent beings with what they want ... which
is the recipe for the kodachrome emulsion they love so much
and plans to build the processing equipment.
until that happens i guess we are all kind of SOL.
Bill:because those numbers were never against the film
Matt... this is related to questions I asked eons ago but nobody seems able to explain the source or processes related to either the paper or ink... or who prints the paper, Kodak or the paper supplier.Thinking way back to my days running an offset press, I think I see where you are coming from.
I wonder if the backing paper comes to Kodak in rolls, and if those rolls are rolled in reverse at any time in the handling process.
The transfer of the ghost image might be a two step transfer - from back, to front, and then to the back again, where it might contact the film emulsion and cause the problem.[/B]
As I understand it, Kodak no longer has the capacity to manufacture the backing paper or to print the numbers and letters on it.Matt... this is related to questions I asked eons ago but nobody seems able to explain the source or processes related to either the paper or ink... or who prints the paper, Kodak or the paper supplier.
It seems like a very important part of the process to consider. At least to me it is.
They would run through a slitter!Thinking way back to my days running an offset press, I think I see where you are coming from.
I wonder if the backing paper comes to Kodak in rolls, and if those rolls are rolled in reverse at any time in the handling process.
The transfer of the ghost image might be a two step transfer - from back, to front, and then to the back again, where it might contact the film emulsion and cause the problem.
I believe that. But other folks keep talking about a single source in the entire world, which begs the question of why the offset problem isn't universal to all 120 film irrespective of the manufacturers name or color.As I understand it, Kodak no longer has the capacity to manufacture the backing paper or to print the numbers and letters on it.
Yes, but are they in a big roll that is run through a slitter, and is that roll "reversed" on the core?They would run through a slitter!
Exactly, the numbers do not align with any point where the numbers were. My next thought is a "printing press" anomaly on the rolled up master backing paper known as offset or (set-off to disambiguate from the process itself).
If you can easily correct any issues in photoshop, then perhaps you could also make digital negatives at the size you'd like to print and contact print them on real bw paper.... My question is; can the negatives (or prints) be repaired so the work isn't ruined or at least still able to be used in some way? I can easily fix the issue in a scanned negative in photoshop, but if I want to make an enlargement in the darkroom (which is what I want to do of course), what can be done to save these images?
Any help would be appreciated.
Bill
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