Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2010/02/22
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Thank you for bringing that up. My favorite surface used to be Agfa 119. When I came back to the States, it wasn't imported. Damn, that was a let down. Paper had changed, and it changed repeatedly. The late 70's was when papers really changed for the very worst. Things were so bad that even discontinued Dupont Varigam began to look good next to the reformulations by Kodak, Agfa, and Ilford. One disaster in particular was Kodak's Elite, with its thicker paper. What wasn't anticipated was the issue of the shrinkage differential between the emulsion coat and the fiber base. It made the prints prone to cracking, even after a long soak in print flattener prior to drying. I even dried them face down, with a tray of water underneath the racks, with little success on making the prints supple and free from curling. The latter prints done from Smith's negs don't have his deft touch with ferricyanide. They look brittle, and face it, uninspired. S.d. On Feb 22, 2010, at 3:58 AM, Tarek Charara wrote: > Whether the paper has changed or I cant print as well, I don't know, but > there was an openness I just can't get with the present papers. I'm not > happy with any that I'm printing on. I have to work harder to get the > openness I want, or I should say I have to work harder with ferricyanide. > [...]"