xtolsniffer
Member
Hi all,
I've started collecting old folders that I find in charity shops. It's fun to get them working and to use them. They mostly take 6x9 cm negatives on 120 film, and most pre-date the second world war. I don't have a 6x9 enlarger (6x7 is the biggest I can go), so I've either been cropping them to 6x7 which is shame as I like the more rectangular format and the loss of resolution in the corners, or contact printing them. I thought that contact printing them would be a little small, but I notice that 6x9 is about the same size as the old 'carte de visite' photos. I have some very old family photos from around that era that look like contact prints but I was wondering what the usual form of production was around that era, were they all just contact printed or enlarged? If contact printing was the norm, then I'm delighted to not only take the images on the old cameras but to print and present them in the traditional way too.
I've started collecting old folders that I find in charity shops. It's fun to get them working and to use them. They mostly take 6x9 cm negatives on 120 film, and most pre-date the second world war. I don't have a 6x9 enlarger (6x7 is the biggest I can go), so I've either been cropping them to 6x7 which is shame as I like the more rectangular format and the loss of resolution in the corners, or contact printing them. I thought that contact printing them would be a little small, but I notice that 6x9 is about the same size as the old 'carte de visite' photos. I have some very old family photos from around that era that look like contact prints but I was wondering what the usual form of production was around that era, were they all just contact printed or enlarged? If contact printing was the norm, then I'm delighted to not only take the images on the old cameras but to print and present them in the traditional way too.