Platinum Printing and ? changes in T-Max 100
Greetings,
A large format photographer freind of mine who does not frequent the internet boards is having trouble and I thought I would querry my friends here. He has used T-Max 100 4x5 film forever in doing platinum contact printing. Recently he has not been able to print with new negatives of recent boxes of T-Max but old negatives print just fine, so he knows his process is OK.
Has anyone had similar experience and does anyone know if there has been a change to T-Max 100 that would possibly make platinum printing not work (such as some new anti-UV companant to the film etc.)
Scott
Platinum Printing and ? changes in T-Max 100
I use Tmax 400 in 8x10 and the new film works just as well, albeit a little less developing time is required. Kodak adviced of this new change and most likely your friend is blowing his highlights, specially if he is using a stainning developer. Without knowing the details of your friend's problem is hard to give you any "good" advice.
Platinum Printing and ? changes in T-Max 100
I may not have made myself clear. It is the Printing that he is having problems with. The negatives look fine, but the UV exposure is not resulting in a print, while the same printing technique done with older T-max 100 negatives are still printing fine. Weird eh?
Scott
Platinum Printing and ? changes in T-Max 100
Sure is, unless he is developing for negs that are too dense......Other than that, the new Tmax works for me...so I dont know what to tell you.
Platinum Printing and ? changes in T-Max 100
This is the first in-the-field confirmation I have heard of this. I sent Sandy King some pyrocat HD film tests on various films about 6 months ago so that he could run them on his UV densitometer. He noticed that the UV wavelength b+f for TMAX 100 was 1.0 as compared to .15-.3 for most other films! That is a full two stop difference. Kodak must have some new film base that blocks UV.
I normally don't use TMX, so I never got around to seeing if this actually had an effect on my platinum printing. This makes me nervous about the 10 new boxes of 12x20 Tri-X I just got from Kodak! I HOPE they did not make some change to the film base for their other films. I'm going to run some tests right away and I'll report back.
Platinum Printing and ? changes in T-Max 100
I can confirm Clay's report, and also note that a second batch of new TMAX 100 film, of very recent manufacturer, tested just a few days ago also, also had a very high b+f reading (over log 1.0) when reading in UV mode with my densitometer, which reads in a narrow band around 373nm. I would be suspicious that all TMAX 100 film of recent origin has the same UV blocking filtration. Since I have not actually tested TMAX 100 with printing using UV radiation it was not clear to me that the UV coating had any impact on printing with Pt/Pd and I posted a note on the alt-photo-process list last to see if anyone else had noticed an increase in printing time with new TMAX 100 film. It would appear from the initiation of this thread that the UV coating may indeed have some impact on actual printing times, though I can not personally verify this at the moment.
BTW, I stripped the emulsion from the TMAX 100 film and verified that the UV blocker is in the coating, not the polyester base.
The latest TRIX-X 320 film and TMAX 400 that I have tested do not block UV light so people with large custom orders of these films will hopefully not be inconvenienced.
Platinum Printing and ? changes in T-Max 100
Just to clarify, didn't Kodak in their infinite wisdom label the NEW film "100 Tmax", while the OLD film was "Tmax 100". It might be helpful to use those names to keep the old and new films straight.
Just my two cents.
DG
Platinum Printing and ? changes in T-Max 100
Good point. We are talking the new 100 T-Max here. Thanks...
Platinum Printing and ? changes in T-Max 100
Yes, interesting point about the name change. But what is the official designation of 100 T-Max. I believe it was TMX, right? Does that designation continue with the new film?
On a follow up to my question to the alt-photo-process list I had a response this past evening to my comment about UV blockers in the new 100 T-Max film from Dr. Bruce E. Kahn, a scientist in the Imaging and Photographic Technology department of the Rochester Institute of Technology. He writes
"Sandy, you are correct that T-Max appears to have a UV absorber in it.
I am currently teaching a course on 19th Century photographic process. A graduate student noticed some interesting differences between different negatives (T-Max and Ilford FP-4). I did some quick absorbance measurements for some of the materials that students were printing using a spectrophotometer. I have posted some of this data at <http://www.rit.edu/~bekpph/historic/films.jpg>. As you can see, T-Max absorbs UV from ~ 320-410 nm. There is a fairly narrow UV transmission window at about 320 nm."
After looking at Dr. Kahn's data it would appear to me that the UV blockage in 100 T-Max film would be very significant for UV sources such as BL and BLB tubes that put out most of their radiation below 420nm, and also consideable for platemakers such as the NuArc 26-IK, both Mercury and Metal Halide lamps. On the other hand, sources such as the Super Actinic or Aqua, that radiate primarily above 420nm, might not be much impacted by the UV blocker in T-Max.
Platinum Printing and ? changes in T-Max 100
Two points. First, Jorge is using Professional T-MAX 400/400TMY, while most of the other discussion and anecdotes specifically refer to Professional T-MAX 100/100 TMX. Dr. Kahn's response does not identify which T-MAX film his data refer to, but, in light of Sandy's question, it's probably also the new 100 TMX. Since Kodak claims that 400 TMY has been made in its new facility for quite some time, and was not recently changed, perhaps a UV absorber was only added to 100 TMX during the move.
A second, though off-topic, point of interest is that 100 TMX's UV blockage might prove useful in enlarging. The focus shift that Ctein documented (resulting from enlarging lenses' failure to focus UV and visible rays at the same plane combined with VC papers' sensitivity to UV) might be mitigated when printing from 100 TMX originals. I haven't printed any, but would be intersted to hear about this possibility from those who have.