etu ? what's Ortho Litho film ?

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From Freestyle email recently,

"One of the most popular products Freestyle has ever carried was a regular supply of Ortho Litho film. After a 2 year absence we have found a new reliable and ongoing supplier for this product. Available in all of the previous sizes we traditionally offered, this film is a bit higher in contrast than previous versions so we highly recommend using a soft working developer such as LegacyPro Select Soft Powder paper developer for continuous-tone work. This new film is also fully compatible with any A&B Lith Film Developer and will not rapidly exhaust or foul your developer like other products on the market."

What's Ortho Litho film ? Is this a 135 or 120 format film ?
thanks

raytoei
 
Are you talking about the Arista ortho-litho film from Freestyle? It looks like it is only available in sheets.

I suspect it's a fine-grained high contrast document or technical film. The "ortho" likely means orthochromatic, not red-sensitive. Most graphic arts films used for half-tone lithography are not red-sensitive, and can be exposed or developed by inspection under a red safelight.

I have not used this film, but I've used Kodak 8x10 Kodalith film to enlarge a small negative onto, then reversal processed it to make an 8x10 enlarged negative for contact printing. It was really hard to control contrast with the Kodalith. I wonder if this one would be easier.

I would guess most folks are using this in their LF cameras, and then processing in a low contrast developer to make a continuous tone negative.
 
I used to use Kodalith in a camera - it rocked! The film produced an image that looked like a pen and ink drawing, with some pointillistic shading. AFIK, Kodalith and all other lith films are orthochromatic. So you can develop them by examination under red or orange lights.
 
I've still got around 50 sheets of 8x10 Kodalith type 2556 somewhere. I should try it in camera. I bet it would make great high-contrast silhouettes if processed in a lith developer.
 
sounds like a paper emulsion coated on film. Soft paper developer for nice greys, lith deveopler for high contrast (black & white).
 
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