FrankS
Registered User
I just heard of this in another thread and googled it. Has anyone tried this product? Has anyone darkroom printed slides onto it?
gns
Well-known
Is it the black & white stuff you are talking about? Sort of a B&W version of Ilfochrome?
I saw an interesting show by Richard Learoyd a while back. He uses Ilfochrome material to make life-size portraits directly on to the direct positive paper. His studio is basically a big camera obscura with the subject in one room and the darkroom next door, and a lens in the wall between. Editions of 1 due to the direct to print process...
http://mckeegallery.com/artists/richard-learoyd/richard-learoyd-unique-photographs/
Gary
I saw an interesting show by Richard Learoyd a while back. He uses Ilfochrome material to make life-size portraits directly on to the direct positive paper. His studio is basically a big camera obscura with the subject in one room and the darkroom next door, and a lens in the wall between. Editions of 1 due to the direct to print process...
http://mckeegallery.com/artists/richard-learoyd/richard-learoyd-unique-photographs/
Gary
Rogier
Rogier Willems
The Imago 1:1 uses this kind of paper.
Think she even sells it.
http://www.imago1to1.com/en/
Think she even sells it.
http://www.imago1to1.com/en/
I just heard of this in another thread and googled it. Has anyone tried this product? Has anyone darkroom printed slides onto it?
gns
Well-known
It doesn't look like it would be suitable for making B&W prints from slides.
It is high contrast according to info from manufacturer.
Gary
It is high contrast according to info from manufacturer.
Gary
FrankS
Registered User
Might be okay with low contrast multi grade filter?
shadowfox
Darkroom printing lives
Frank, watch the video here:
http://new55project.blogspot.com/2011/05/ilford-direct-positive-paper-and.html
http://new55project.blogspot.com/2011/05/ilford-direct-positive-paper-and.html
Jamie123
Veteran
Is it the black & white stuff you are talking about? Sort of a B&W version of Ilfochrome?
I saw an interesting show by Richard Learoyd a while back. He uses Ilfochrome material to make life-size portraits directly on to the direct positive paper. His studio is basically a big camera obscura with the subject in one room and the darkroom next door, and a lens in the wall between. Editions of 1 due to the direct to print process...
http://mckeegallery.com/artists/richard-learoyd/richard-learoyd-unique-photographs/
Gary
Here's the camera:
http://lightbox.time.com/?attachment_id=7900
FrankS
Registered User
Thanks Will. Seems to me that if contrast can be tamed by pre-flashing the paper to use to make a portrait, one can do the same in order to print onto it from a slide.
Roger Hicks
Veteran
It is pretty contrasty, even pre-flashed. My own view, having tried quite a lot of it (the review is with Shutterbug now), is that without pre-flashing, it is too contrasty for most applications. And of course it's not panchromatic, so printing from most slides would be interesting (which I haven't tried).
Cheers,
R.
Cheers,
R.
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