Please do Bob . . then we can all have it.
Jack Fulton
On Apr 8, 2005, at 11:51 PM, Bob Maxey wrote:
> >>>Carbon is a beautiful process, and carbro makes it relatively easy
> to get
> large carbon prints from small negatives -- the bromide print is
> easier to
> produce than an enlarged negative, and contrast adjustment is
> straightforward so you can print negatives that were developed for
> silver-gelatin work. You can also get a right-reading print with only
> one
> transfer if you make the bromide print with the negative emulsion-side
> up
> in the enlarger. To do this with carbon requires making a contact
> print
> through the base of the film, which tends to reduce sharpness. The
> carbro
> tonal scale has a more pronounced "S" shape than the carbon scale,
> however.>>>
>
>
>
> If there is interest, I have a document that explains the process in
> great detail. It is an old document and discusses how to combine the
> process with the Chromotone process (long gone). Perhaps I'll dig it
> up and put it in the links section of this group's web site.
>
>
>
> Bob
> ...
>
>
> Get more from the Web. FREE MSN Explorer download :
> http://explorer.msn.com
>
Received on Sat Apr 9 08:24:17 2005
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.8 : 05/13/05-09:23:11 AM Z CST