+1. It is that good. I still have some from 15 years ago stored at room temperate. Hardly a tiny bit of fog, easily corrected with Farmer's. - David LygaAdorama house brand.
+1. It is that good. I still have some from 15 years ago stored at room temperate. Hardly a tiny bit of fog, easily corrected with Farmer's. - David LygaAdorama house brand.
The name "Oriental" seems abit odd as well - in this day & age....?

The name "Oriental" seems abit odd as well - in this day & age....?

Look for a really soft pencil - #6 or so.The only other annoyance on the Seagull paper is I can't really write notes on the back of them, just kind of wipes off compared to the Ilford multigrade paper.
Thanks for the tip.Look for a really soft pencil - #6 or so.
Technically, it isn't fixer "remover". The fixer is removed by the wash. The clearing agent/wash aid just changes the fixer to a chemical complex that is more soluble in water than the original.
To get blacker blacks, try adding a very short burst with the highest contrast filter you have.
Looks like a great setup!
Probably, though I don't, too expensive, too limited on choices. Most other accessories sure, but not film.I believe that darkroom is why we can still buy film, paper and chemicals at Norman Camera!
My RC paper drier I stole from my wife - her $15 hair drierSince I was running low on some paper donated to me by a fellow classmate and professor (both the usual recommended Ilford Multigrade glossy 8x10 resin coated paper) I decided to place an order this morning for some Oriental Seagull VC Resin paper (it was just a dollar more than Kentmere, which from reviews seem to suggest it doesn't have as wide a contrast range as Ilford/etc, but least 10 less than Ilford MG IV).
But for future reference I was curious to hear what people liked and why. At the school we're mainly using a bunch of Beseler 67SC enlargers with condenser heads and Beselar 50/3.5 (though on mine I swapped the lens out with an El-Omegar 50/3.5 I like better, though would have preferred the Nikon 75/4, but a bit too long for 35mm). Figured I'd mention it since it seems like some papers behave differently between condenser heads and cold cathode diffusion heads (I used to own a 23C with a cold head, but got lost in storage when it lapsed)
With least the Ilford stuff I been a fan of printing more towards higher contrast side, usually a Ilford 3 filter or higher, or if I go any higher than 3-1/2 I'm splitting between low and high contrast in two exposures. And while some of my stuff is loose, I plan on placing keepers into archival sleeves with their own paper backing/inserts so bending isn't as much an issue.
The only other papers I have right now that isn't fogged to hell (though to be honest some of them do have a cool but unpredictable texture, basically inherited from the store before it went under) are :
to me ,time is money, so, I just stick with Alford quality papers. Why take chances and risk frustration with low- cost papers? I can't afford the cheap stuff or buying and printing twice.
- Ilford Multigrade fiber based, warm tone, semi-mat, 8x10 in 100 sheet box that I bought new back in 2007 and haven't gotten round to using it till this year. Love the paper but I don't use it much because I wait until the end of the day when most people have left to use it, so that I can allow it longer wash times without someone adding a new print to the wash.
- Agfa Brovira 5x7, fiber based, that expired in 1957. A tricky paper due to age, but I've gotten some real nice tones off it.
So in a nutshell I'm looking for some economical resin coated glossy or semi-gloss for regular use, but will still give me good contrast control. Preferably on the neutral/cool side for the normal usage.
Edit: We're using Sprint developer/stop/fix in the trays. The rapid fixer is non-hardening if it matters for recommendations. When it comes to the wash, the guideline has simply been 5 minutes in a tray with running water. (I usually want to go for 20+ but course if I use any of the fiber based paper, it'll get re-contaminated each time a student adds a print to the tray, usually no more than 2 sit in a tray at a time before they squeegee it and stick it in the rack, though for FB I use the ancient huge 26 foot belt/heat dryer out in the hallway, I'm like the only one using the old stuff this semester)
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