Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/12/25
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Hi Francesco I have been a darkroom enthusiast since my schooldays in 1969 and B&W printing is what I like to do. Currently, 80% of my pictures are taken in B&W with the rest in colour. I used to take slides but found the following too frustrating: 1. Storage. Assuming that I shoot a roll a fortnight, that means that I have 26 boxes of slides a year. This takes up considerable storage space in humid Singapore where people have to keep their slides in dry cabinets to prevent fungal growth. Even if I were to develop the film only and then cut the frames that I want and mount them, this is added labour and time which I have little to spare. 2. Cataloging. To me, this is the difficult part for slides. With B&W, I do a contact print and this goes next to the negative sleeve in my filing system. Retrieval and reprint are very easily achieved. I get lost when I have to handle slides - somehow they get lost in the system after some time and would be soon forgotten. 3. Reproducibility. I get any number of reprints wity negs - happily giving them away to friends at a low cost to me. With slides, showing them to friends requires elaborate projector setup and duplication of slides has its inherent problems. Soooooooo........ many years back, I made the decision to concentrate on B&W and colour negs and take slides only when the need arises. I still take 6x6 colour slides when the editor of my church newsletter requires a cover picture on a particular theme and then I get to work on it and give her a slide for publication. This I have done on numerous occasions and can be really rewarding. Dan K. At 08:52 PM 24/12/98 -0800, you wrote: >Just curious why you choose to never use slide films? > >Francesco > > > >At 12:38 AM 12/25/98 , D Khong wrote: >>> >>>1. Outdoor, normal daylight.....Konica VX-100, any Ilford B&W >>>2. Indoor, normal to low light..... EGP 400, Delta 400 or HP5+ >>>3. Indoor and Outdoor, LOW to bad light..... Ektapress 800, Delta >>400(pushed) >>>4. When ULTIMATE sharpness and SMALLEST grain are desired..... Ektar 25, >>Delta 100 rated at 50 and developed to 80% of recommended time. >>>5. Outdoor portraits..... Ektacolor 160, Ilford Deltas >>> >> >>*I almost never use slide films. >> >>Dan K. >> > >