David Karp
19-Jul-2010, 22:00
I was looking at some older threads, perhaps some that I came across while searching for something else in the archives of this forum, bemoaning the lack of nice traditional enlarging papers. It made me think about my recent visit to Freestyle.
For my recent flurry of darkroom activity, I needed to pick up some paper and chemicals. While looking around the store, it hardly seemed as if we could be living in a digital world. (Unless I looked across to that section of the store!) In addition to old standbys from Ilford/Harmon and Oriental, there was a great selection of beautiful fiber VC and graded papers (they have samples on the wall created in various developers, with various finishes) from Adox (they have several really nice papers - hard to choose which one to use), Kentmere/Harmon, Foma, Slavich, and Fotokemika, not to mention their store brand papers, which mirror some of those from Foma and Adox. And the amazing thing is that some of these papers are fairly newly introduced, or reformulated.
I ended up printing a couple of photos on Kentmere Fineprint VCFB (beautiful neutral to cold tone with a beautiful surface), two on Arista.EDU Ultra VCFB (very nice neutral to warm tone, fantastic value - same as Foma Variant), and one on Adox MCC110 (developed in Zonal Pro HQ Warmtone - just beautiful). Sure, a few years ago, we would have had Kodak, Forte, and Agfa on the shelf, but with the work Adox is doing resurrecting the Agfa papers, (and soon it seems Forte Polywarmtone) it seems like in many ways we are in better shape than we were in right before digital took off. I just don't think I could possibly use all of the papers that I was perusing that day, or even want to do so. Yeah, most stores don't carry chemical photo papers anymore, but the truth is most photo stores I visited had a pretty limited selection, even during the heyday of the darkroom hobbyist. You had to go to a megastore like Altmans, or B&H, or Freestyle to find a huge selection. Freestyle is close to my home, so I am lucky, but for others, it is still just a click away.
One of these days I am going to have to try some Adox Fineprint Vario Classic, or perhaps some Adox Variotone!
So, I am feeling pretty lucky to have so much choice.
Perhaps later this year I will shoot some Adox Pan 400 . . . . :)
For my recent flurry of darkroom activity, I needed to pick up some paper and chemicals. While looking around the store, it hardly seemed as if we could be living in a digital world. (Unless I looked across to that section of the store!) In addition to old standbys from Ilford/Harmon and Oriental, there was a great selection of beautiful fiber VC and graded papers (they have samples on the wall created in various developers, with various finishes) from Adox (they have several really nice papers - hard to choose which one to use), Kentmere/Harmon, Foma, Slavich, and Fotokemika, not to mention their store brand papers, which mirror some of those from Foma and Adox. And the amazing thing is that some of these papers are fairly newly introduced, or reformulated.
I ended up printing a couple of photos on Kentmere Fineprint VCFB (beautiful neutral to cold tone with a beautiful surface), two on Arista.EDU Ultra VCFB (very nice neutral to warm tone, fantastic value - same as Foma Variant), and one on Adox MCC110 (developed in Zonal Pro HQ Warmtone - just beautiful). Sure, a few years ago, we would have had Kodak, Forte, and Agfa on the shelf, but with the work Adox is doing resurrecting the Agfa papers, (and soon it seems Forte Polywarmtone) it seems like in many ways we are in better shape than we were in right before digital took off. I just don't think I could possibly use all of the papers that I was perusing that day, or even want to do so. Yeah, most stores don't carry chemical photo papers anymore, but the truth is most photo stores I visited had a pretty limited selection, even during the heyday of the darkroom hobbyist. You had to go to a megastore like Altmans, or B&H, or Freestyle to find a huge selection. Freestyle is close to my home, so I am lucky, but for others, it is still just a click away.
One of these days I am going to have to try some Adox Fineprint Vario Classic, or perhaps some Adox Variotone!
So, I am feeling pretty lucky to have so much choice.
Perhaps later this year I will shoot some Adox Pan 400 . . . . :)