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View Full Version : Why not a 4x5 holder as big as an 8x10?



Ben Syverson
11-Mar-2009, 21:48
I was shooting a little 8x10 today, and had a thought... Wouldn't it be cool to have a 4x5 film holder that was the same size as an 8x10 double dark?

That way, you wouldn't need to have a 4x5 reducing back to shoot 4x5 on your 8x10. And you could switch between 4x5 and 8x10 as quickly as you could swap film holders.

Does such a thing exist? If not, I guess I could glue some 4x5 guides in the middle of a 8x10 double dark and see what happens. :)

Jim Graves
11-Mar-2009, 22:17
Nice idea ... one issue would be adding something at the "open" end of the 4x5 guides so the film could not slide out of position after it was loaded.

Frank Petronio
11-Mar-2009, 22:23
Just tape a pc of film in the center of a regular 8x10 holder.

Go one further like one semi-famous guy who took a roll of 35mm film and cut it up into strips and taped it into an 8x10 holder for a very disjointed but cool image.

Vaughn
11-Mar-2009, 22:26
I got some of those...one-sided, with a pressure plate on one side and glass on the other -- you can load any size film (8x10 or smaller) that you want to.

Trouble is, a reducing back and a whole mess of 4x5 holders would take up less space and weigh less than an 8x10 back and a few of converted 8x10 holders.

Another thing one could do is just have 8x10 film/holders and use those cropping boards inside the camera to make 4 4x5 shots on a piece of 8x10 film.

Vaughn

vinny
11-Mar-2009, 22:27
here's another idea:
http://www.toho-machine.co.jp/Reducing.htm

John Schneider
11-Mar-2009, 23:03
I made one of these in 4x10 for the occasional shot on an 8x10 camera. Problem is that this approach quickly becomes heavier and bulkier than a 4x10 reducing back and dedicated 4x10 holders.

But the reducing back costs $$$ and you still have the bulk of an 8x10 camera. IMO, unless you like to tinker and make over-engineered stuff (and I'm guily of that as well), I'd just (as Vaughn suggested supra) make two splitter darkslides and make four 4x5 exposures on an 8x10 sheet. The biggest drawback to that method is that you can't separately develop each exposure.

Ole Tjugen
11-Mar-2009, 23:03
Plate holders used to come with a whole set of reducing inserts for use with smaller plates. As an example my 24x30cm (9.5x12") camera came with inserts for 18x24, 13x18, 10x15, 9x12 and 6.5x9cm.

Archphoto
12-Mar-2009, 03:37
Why go though all the bulk if you can do it with your enlarger anyway ???
Shooting 4x5 with a 8x10 ?
I have a 4x5 rear frame on my Sinar P2, it is on the camera most of the time.
The conversion takes a couple of minutes.....

Peter

Walter Calahan
12-Mar-2009, 04:25
Crop!

Arthur Nichols
12-Mar-2009, 04:52
I modified some 8x10 holders into 5x8 and 4x10 by using blank exposed and fixed film as fillers. For the 4x10 I made two strips of 2x10 and two strips of 1 7/8. First I attached the smaller strip with double sided tape to the holder and then attached the slightly wider one on top. I did this for both the top and and the bottom of the holder. By doing this I ended up with a 4x10 slot in the center of the holder with two small lips on the 10' dimension that I slip the film under. It worked resaonably well. I made two holders like this and the second one held the film a litte more secure than the first one.
I also made a 5x8 holder in the same way but added fillers to take up the unused space at the ends. I made a flap at the end that is used for loading.
I would prefer dedicated holders and reducing backs but for the money these are a resonable substitue. One advantage to the modified holders is that the focal plane stays in exactly the same plane and you don't have to check focus when you change formats.
Art

W K Longcor
12-Mar-2009, 05:10
Plate holders used to come with a whole set of reducing inserts for use with smaller plates. As an example my 24x30cm (9.5x12") camera came with inserts for 18x24, 13x18, 10x15, 9x12 and 6.5x9cm.

I have one of these holders with the reducing inserts. It is 11x14 size with wooden inserts for 8x10 - 5x7 - full plate -- 4x5. I have metal adaptors for sheet film for the 8x10 - 5x7 - and 4x5. Holder came with a F&S copy camera (BIG beautiful wooden camera!). The holder is a great mosaic of wood adaptors! It is a single sided holder.:)

Renato Tonelli
12-Mar-2009, 05:36
here's another idea:
http://www.toho-machine.co.jp/Reducing.htm

This is very intriguing - has anyone seen one in the flesh?

jnantz
12-Mar-2009, 14:41
This is very intriguing - has anyone seen one in the flesh?

i have one that reduces 5x7 to 4x5 ...

Lachlan 717
12-Mar-2009, 14:54
1 reducing back + ten 4x5 DDS = much less volume than ten 8x10 reducing DDS (assuming space allows for reducing dark slides)

Ben Syverson
12-Mar-2009, 14:55
I think Frank had the right idea -- in a pinch, I could just create some 4x5 guides using gaff tape on the 8x10 holder (in daylight), and then use the guides to find the right position for the 4x5 in the dark, and use two tiny bits of tape to secure it.

I can't use a reducing back on my camera, hence my creativity (read: kludge).

Ben Syverson
12-Mar-2009, 15:10
The reason I want to do this is because sometimes I have the 8x10 all set up and I want to fire off a 4x5 for fun... I would never load 20 sheets of 4x5 into 10 8x10 double darks... Also, this is all in my studio, so there's no need to think about the extra weight or volume of 8x10 holders, since they're already there! :)

Don Hutton
12-Mar-2009, 15:37
This is very intriguing - has anyone seen one in the flesh?Yes - I have two - an 8x10 to 4x5 as well as an 8x10 to 5x7 - they work very well... Check the classifieds.

Frank Petronio
12-Mar-2009, 16:15
lol what a coincidence!