Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/06/04
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]- --============_-1315111250==_ma============ Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" >I would like to submit photos for publication. However, most magazines >only accept slides. and custom prints here in Vancouver run CDN$ 50 >(approx USD$ 35) for a 8x12. When submitting photos for publication you submit the slide (or a high quality dup). You don't submit a print. > Is that a good deal? I like having enlargements of my pictures always on >>hand, but at $50 a pop, too expensive. Any suggestions? That's not the best deal that I've heard of--check out The Lightroom at http://www.lightroom.com They've made excellent prints from slides for me, but it's still not the sort of thing I do with every photograph. I pick the ones that I really like and want to hang on my wall or someone else's. Before you invest in a bunch of cibachromes, however, I would put my slides in archival sleeves, get a good loupe (Schneider 4x is nice), and a 5000K light box. You can look at your slides any time you want and they'll never look better. For showing photos to friends get a Pradovit P150 with the 90/2.5 Colorplan flat field (my new joy). Of course, a lot of publications will take negatives nowadays since they can be scanned and published as easily as slides. In that case a print is better to send than the original. A good printer is someone you'll have to search out locally--you won't get much from the corner one hour processing lab. In fact you're lucky if your negs. don't come back with nice long scratches on them from the roller processor or bizarre color castes from improperly maintained chemicals. - -Charlie - -------------------------------------------- Charles E. Dunlap Earth Sciences Department University of California Santa Cruz, CA 95064 Tel.: (408) 459-5228 Fax.: (408) 459-3074 mailto:cdunlap@es.ucsc.edu - -------------------------------------------- - --============_-1315111250==_ma============ Content-Type: text/enriched; charset="us-ascii" <excerpt>I would like to submit photos for publication. However, most magazines only accept slides. and custom prints here in Vancouver run CDN$ 50 (approx USD$ 35) for a 8x12. </excerpt> When submitting photos for publication you submit the slide (or a high quality dup). You don't submit a print. > Is that a good deal? I like having enlargements of my pictures always on >hand, but at $50 a pop, too expensive. Any suggestions? That's not the best deal that I've heard of--check out The Lightroom at http://www.lightroom.com They've made excellent prints from slides for me, but it's still not the sort of thing I do with every photograph. I pick the ones that I really like and want to hang on my wall or someone else's. Before you invest in a bunch of cibachromes, however, I would put my slides in archival sleeves, get a good loupe (Schneider 4x is nice), and a 5000K light box. You can look at your slides any time you want and they'll never look better. For showing photos to friends get a Pradovit P150 with the 90/2.5 Colorplan flat field (my new joy). Of course, a lot of publications will take negatives nowadays since they can be scanned and published as easily as slides. In that case a print is better to send than the original. A good printer is someone you'll have to search out locally--you won't get much from the corner one hour processing lab. In fact you're lucky if your negs. don't come back with nice long scratches on them from the roller processor or bizarre color castes from improperly maintained chemicals. - -Charlie - -------------------------------------------- Charles E. Dunlap Earth Sciences Department University of California Santa Cruz, CA 95064 Tel.: (408) 459-5228 Fax.: (408) 459-3074 mailto:cdunlap@es.ucsc.edu - -------------------------------------------- - --============_-1315111250==_ma============--