DREW WILEY
Member
- Joined
- Jul 14, 2011
- Messages
- 13,679
- Format
- 8x10 Format
You bring up such memories, Adrian! My mother had a little box Brownie (the black kind), put an equivalent of Kodak gold in there, would get everyone in the viewfinder, then look back up and ask everyone to smile, trip the button, and every single picture she ever took was tilted! No meter. If a snapshot turned out washed out, the store got blamed. It takes a lot of patience working with other peoples negatives. I almost never did that. But I did do a number of complex photo restoration projects. In one case, there was only one surviving print of an entire family, and it had gone through a fire. That's why I kept Tech Pan and IR film on hand; these films can see through quite a bit. Those kinds of tasks are a lot easier today via digital copy and workflow. I've bought a fair amount of outdated 8x10 chrome film to save money, especially doing experimental things. If it's kept frozen the whole time, it's good for quite awhile, but once thawed can develop crossover much faster than new film, so needs to be used more promptly. Last year I found a single unused sheet of 8x10 ACROS over 20 yrs old in a paper safe I thought was empty. So I did a "what the heck" shot with it a few days later and it came out incredibly surreal - not exactly a solarized sun, but more of an eclipse-like veil. Mistakes are great at times. But making mistakes with other peoples' film, no, that's too risky for me. I have salvaged a few irreplaceable adventure pics for personal friends, as well printing select 4x5 chromes from my late brother's collection before they totally degraded form mildew or whatever; some of those were on ultra-grainy pre-E6 Agfachrome, but had marvelous color. But as an aside, I don't like people calling inkjet prints "pigment prints" - they're not, but ink blends including a number of fairly common dyes. True pigment printing is something entirely different.