Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/12/30

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Subject: Re[Leica] All hail Tri-X, Off with TMAX's head!
From: "Dan S" <dstate1@hotmail.com>
Date: Fri, 31 Dec 1999 04:06:17 GMT

So true about the tonality.  I recently received Salgado's "Terra" and was 
amazed by the results he got with Tmax...So I jumped from good old Tri-X or 
Delta 100 back into Tmax 100 and Kodak Polycontrast paper.

What a waste...Whatever Salgado does to Tmax, it looks a hell of a lot 
better than MY stuff.  All I get is murky crud.  I either overdevelope by 15 
sec and blow out the highlights, or end up with negs that print flat. (I'm 
pretty careful about temp/time etc, so I am guessing there is something else 
in my equation that is not adding up)

As for the PAPER....I have been using Ilford for years and was not prepared 
for the tremendous "dry down" of Kodak VC.  As Adams said, paper can dry 
with a "dull thud".  And HOW!

I hope for Kodak's sake they start fixing up some of their newer generation 
products...Or at least make them as user friendly as Illford.

Best Wishes
Dan States
Chicago Illinois


>From: Mike Johnston <michaeljohnston@ameritech.net>

>
>Its BEST quality, though, its its tonality. There's almost no mistaking
>Tri-X prints. They can have a tonal beauty that is most remarkable. In
>my opinion, tonality or gradation, although discussed relatively
>infrequently (if ever), is a more important property of black-and-white
>prints than ANY OTHER SINGLE PROPERTY. And the curves it yields at
>normal development times match up very usefully with the highlight
>contrast of many of the better VC papers.
>

>
>

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