Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/04/19
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Ted, Can you recommend a archival type clear page sleeves that come close to fitting on an 8X10 sheet. I have several makes of 6 and 7 strip sheets and they all result in at least 1/4 inch missing from the top & bottom of the sheet. I have tried to find the 81/2 X 11 paper but it is special order and expensive. Any common sense tips? Ken - ----- Original Message ----- From: "Ted Grant" <tedgrant@home.com> To: <leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us> Sent: April 19, 2000 10:09 AM Subject: Re: [Leica] making contact prints > > > > Andrew Moore wrote: > > > > > I usually don't make contact sheets from my (OT: Leica) > > > 35 mm negatives because I simply don't have a way of > > > doing it with good results. I'd like to start making contact > > > sheets now. Is there any equipment or techniques that > > > would really help here, particularly for holding a set of > > > negative strips (4 frames per) aligned and flat while the > > > exposure is made?<<<<<<<<<<< > > Hi Andrew, > > This method may have already been covered, however it the event it > hasn't: This is fast, efficient and gets the proofing of 3-4 or 30-40 > rolls of film out of the way quickly. > > Put enlarger head up to cover base of enlarger with light. You don't > need to stop down, just let her have it wide open, helps cut down on > printing time. > > Buy a contact printer, several on the market. As soon as your negs are > dry immediately cut and sleeve in the archival type clear page sleeves > that hold 6 or 7 strips of film. > > Here you must determine if you want 7 strips of 5 negs each or 6 strips > of 6. Either fits on a sheet of 8X10. No big deal as they're only > contacts and that you see yourself or someone who truly knows how to > read contacts. Never, never never show them to a client who is not > skilled with a loupe or is accustomed to looking at contacts. If you do > you'll have more damn grief than you can shake a stick at. ( "gee I > can't see these little pictures, can they be made bigger, don't you have > a bigger camera?" ) etc. etc. > > With lights out and safe lights on, contact printer with paper > inserted...."shiny side up," lay sheet of sleeved film on paper. close > down glass, apply pressure and hit the light. Don't worry about the > quality of printing through the plastic sleeves they print just fine, > in the event anyone tells you that it's a no-no! Forget it! ....this > comes from multi years of experience of using this method with contacts > going to some of the finest photo editors in the country. > > Whatever you do.....DO NOT FIDDLE WITH TRYING TO LAY OUT 6 OR 7 > INDIVIDUAL STRIPS OF FILM! You'll go absoloutely crazy , pure utter > madness to attempt this micky mouse method!! > > The secret for sharp contact sheets is... " A: sharp negatives!" > B: Followed by pressure on the glass to maintain absolute contact of > film to paper. > > Make one test exposure sheet, soup it, if it looks OK bang off the rest > of them one right after the other. If you have ten rolls, expose all > ten rolls, and as you do each one just put the exposed sheet of paper to > one side in an empty covered paper box. When all rolls are exposed, > take the bunch of them, feed them quickly into the developer and soup > all at once and contact printing is over. :) > > Remember like everything else photographic..........keep it simple! > Contacts are no big deal, but they do need to be of a quality that you > can read well. > > so there you are, get your ass in gear and get on with it! :-) > > ted