Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/03/04
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]>>> > Even with a half-glass carrier (the only kind I will use for 35mm), I hereby admit that I've never encountered such a beast. Is that glass on the light side and air on the easel side? Are they a standard item, or do they tend to be cobbled up by the user?<<< Jeff, Either one. With the standard type of carrier that uses inserts for different formats or for glass, you can make one easily by interchanging the inserts--a glass insert on the top (light source) side, and an open glassless insert on the bottom (easel) side. With most of the Durst carriers and the Saunders 670, and perhaps some others I'm not as familiar with (Kaiser too, I think), it's short work. With my old Saunders 4x5 enlarger, however, I had to make one, and it was quit involved and quite expensive--you need to buy a glass carrier (around $100), dismantle it, buy a 35mm carrier, dismantle it, then drill out the guide pegs, file down the burrs, cover the holes with tape, and reassemble the carrier with the glass half on top and the now-smooth 35mm half on the bottom. Saunders doesn't make a true ff 35mm carrier for the 4x5, either, or didn't when I had mine, so you may have to file out the opening if you prefer to print ff as I do. And it's sometimes difficult positioning leftover "short strips" of negatives in that carrier...and if you want to re-convert it to a full glass carrier it takes a bit of time and work with a jeweler's screwdriver. Half-glass carriers work great with 35mm film. The dried filmstrip curls upwards, so the glass on top flattens it beautifully; but because you're not "sandwiching" it under pressure, you get no Newton rings (at least I never have, with many different negative carriers over the years*); and the two side of glass aren't so hard to keep clean--the underside gets little dust falling on it, and the upper side is always accessible to a quick blast of air or a wipe with a cloth or brush. While we're at it, I'll share another neat little trick: if you have a Saunders or Omega 4x5 enlarger, you can easily make enlarged 35mm proofs. Buy a Saunders 4x5 glass carrier (it will fit the Omega enlarger, but the Omega glass carrier cannot be used for this trick). Cut your film in 6 strips of 6 frames each. By carefully laying the film in the carrier with the edges overlapping (with practice, this becomes easy enough to do), you can fit nine frames very neatly in the 4x5 glass carrier. Enlarge this using your 4x5 enlarging lens just as you would a 4x5 negative, and you can quickly and easily put 9 35mm frames on a sheet of 8x10, 11x14, or even 16x20 paper. Do this four times, and you've proofed the entire roll. The enlarged proofs make a serviceable substitute for work prints, so, if you work-print as part of your editing procedure, you may save yourself a lot of time and effort. They're certainly luxurious--once you get used to enlarged proofs, it's painful to go back to contacts. - --Mike * Rule 23: Never generalize on the LUG; you WILL get your ass kicked....