Thanks!
Are the disadvantages described here the reason there is no direct positive black and white film: https://www.photrio.com/forum/threads/direct-positive-paper-how-does-it-work.68539/post-965322 ?
The bit about tonal scale/latitude, I imagine, would have been relevant. Moreover, a key element in photography has always been the aspect of reproduction. A negative-negative process is inherently suited for that in an efficient way: you create an in-camera negative, and then make as many prints from that at whatever size you want with another negative-working process.
If you start with a film positive, you first have to turn that into a negative again to use a negatve-working printing process, or you'd also have to use a positive-working printing process. The latter would led you to a positive-positive process, which theoretically is feasible too, but then you'd hit upon the drawbacks outlined earlier.
I have a lot of B&W direct duplicating film in my freezer. It is how I make platinum prints from roll film. I have a bunch of it because it was discontinued and I wanted to continue using it. It goes negative to negative but would also go positive to positive. It is full tonal range and very development flexible contrast. I don't know how it works but Ithink it was somehow pre-exposed. It processes in standard metol/hydroquinone type developer.
What is this film called and who produced it?
Thanks!
Are the disadvantages described here the reason there is no direct positive black and white film: https://www.photrio.com/forum/threads/direct-positive-paper-how-does-it-work.68539/post-965322 ?
There is at least one direct positive film you can still get pretty cheap, Mikrat Ortho/FPP Super Positive. Unfortunately only available in 35mm. Would love to get some larger DP rolls for sheet films.
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