Results 1 to 7 of 7

Thread: Cold Cathode light and Variable contrast paper

  1. #1

    Cold Cathode light and Variable contrast paper

    Hi,
    Does anyone have direct experience of using single tube, cold cathode lights sources and variable contrast paper. I have read somewhere that it is possible to use additional, below lens filters, to simulate the green tube(soft grade) effect. Any thoughts on this ? I would be most grateful for any input
    Colin Myers

  2. #2

    Join Date
    Mar 2002
    Location
    now in Tucson, AZ
    Posts
    3,617

    Cold Cathode light and Variable contrast paper

    I've used variable-contrast papers and a (blue) Zone VI stabilized cold-light for many years. I put Kodak filters beneath the lens to control contrast. My "normal" filter with this setup is the #1. With a tungsten light source the same neg prints with a #2 filter. Some people suggest a CP40Y filter above the neg to correct the lamp color, but I find this unnecessary; I feel it just adds neutral density and so slows things down. I have no problem reaching very high or low levels of contrast, but I do try to make negs that don't need extremes of paper contrast. I've occaisionally found that a 1/2 grade filter change gives more contrast change in the print than I want, but that's rare, and I've been able to work around it. A new tube with the correct phosphor for VC paper sounds good, but I haven't tried it yet.

  3. #3

    Cold Cathode light and Variable contrast paper

    I have been using a V54 aristo cold lamp for a number of years now and have a tungsten diffusion enlarger also. I use below the lens filters(kodak polymax) and have done a number of comparsion tests between the 2 enlargers. I have also had the opportunity to use a newer enlarger at a workshop with a dicro head. To the best of my a bility i have not been able to tell any difference between any of them i.e. contrast range of papers etc. If you have a "blue light only" light source get Steve Anchells book on variable contrast printing it has very good information on how to get a blue light only unit to work. As an aside in Anchells book he compares several different papers,filter systems and 2 different light sources. It is very enlightening as it shows little to no difference in contrast ranges of papers when using different light sources or filter systems, the biggest differences are in the paper's themselves.

  4. #4

    Join Date
    Feb 2002
    Location
    Westcliff-on-Sea, United Kingdom
    Posts
    36

    Cold Cathode light and Variable contrast paper

    Hello Colin,

    I have used a DeVere cold-cathode with below the lens filters for five years or so (just got a dichro head, though). The output from the DeVere cc head has quite a strong blue colour.

    I found that half-step increments in contrast were a bit problematical (same as Mark points out), but it worked very well indeed with whole steps, except at either end of the scale where changes were very hard to discern.

    However, for grades 2 to 5 steps were predictable and worked well (without any filtration at all my setup gave me the equivalent of about 2.5).

    Regards,
    Neil.

  5. #5

    Cold Cathode light and Variable contrast paper

    I read that a light green filter under light source is used to change color output so that filters will act more like they would with a tungston source.

  6. #6
    Donald Qualls's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2004
    Location
    North Carolina
    Posts
    1,092

    Cold Cathode light and Variable contrast paper

    I've got a Zone VI cold light -- can't say for certain it's cold-cathode, but I suspect all of them are (instant start instead of the flicker-flicker-blink-start of a common fluorescent), and I don't know for certain if it's a "blue" or a VC type; the light looks bluish-white to my eye, similar to the color of a "white" LED. I've been very happy with my results split filtering under it using Lee theatrical lighting filters, Dark Blue 119 and Spring Yellow 100 for hard and soft respectively. I get contrast grades I estimate as ranging from 1 to 6; I may shop for a yellow or green with 20-50 nm longer cutoff wavelength to see if I can soften the soft end a little more.

    FWIW, on what I'm used to considering a "normal" negative, I wind up using approximately equal exposure times with the two filters...
    If a contact print at arm's length is too small to see, you need a bigger camera. :D

  7. #7

    Cold Cathode light and Variable contrast paper

    Thanks everyone for your input on this, most helpful

    Colin

Similar Threads

  1. PMK and Variable Contrast Paper
    By steve simmons in forum Darkroom: Film, Processing & Printing
    Replies: 4
    Last Post: 13-Apr-2004, 07:50
  2. variable contrast paper VS cold light filtering
    By Pierre Robitaille in forum Darkroom: Film, Processing & Printing
    Replies: 4
    Last Post: 6-Jun-2002, 21:01
  3. Need info about using De Vere 507 cold cathode
    By Neil Miller in forum Darkroom: Equipment
    Replies: 2
    Last Post: 21-Feb-2002, 05:22
  4. Best paper for Graflarger Aristo Cold light
    By werps in forum Darkroom: Film, Processing & Printing
    Replies: 5
    Last Post: 1-Aug-2000, 18:37
  5. difference using dichroic vs variable contrast light head?
    By Yong-ran Zhu in forum Darkroom: Film, Processing & Printing
    Replies: 5
    Last Post: 16-Jul-1999, 16:11

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •