James Drukeli
Member
i just purchased a pack of Arista Ortho Litho Film and couldn't help but notice how flimsy it is.
But, when you get the hang of it and honor its restrictions, you will reap bounteously. Don't expect it to be 'forgiving': it is not Tri-X, after all. - David LygaThanks for the replies! Slowly making progress but shooting this film is difficult.
The thinness of the base does not have much to do with the thinness of the emulsion.It might seem flimsy, but that 'thinness' guarantees two things:
Right! Personally “stripped “ hundreds of halftones in my 30 years in the printing industry. Probably shot thousands that others stripped.The original use of litho film was in graphic arts for platemaking purposes. Some litho film, such as what copy was shot on was thicker and the non emulsion side had some texture to it to facilitate spotting to repair image defects and dust spots. Others like what you have was mainly for halftones and other fine line work and the thinness was an advantage when taping a halftone or other artwork into a clear window in the page film situated where the halftone image was desired. Anything very thick would lift the page film off the plate surface in spite of the vacuum applied in the plate contact frame and cause distortions and bleed problems with any nearby copy. Higher end printers would often use a separate overlay with the halftones to overcome this but back in the day newspapers would tape them in direct to save time. I would imagine the thin base of the Arista is a holdover from that era.
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