[PRCo] Re: Films
Bob Rathke
bobrathke at comcast.net
Thu May 12 19:26:19 EDT 2011
Yes, painting the kitchen ceiling, trips, naps. I'll add - cleaning out the basement.
Bob
----- Original Message -----
From: "Fred Schneider" <fwschneider at comcast.net>
To: pittsburgh-railways at dementia.org
Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2011 4:14:55 PM
Subject: [PRCo] Films
I think the Ansco products were very bad when you stacked them against Kodachrome. Â We all know that Kodachrome had extreme dye logevity, particularly dark storage. Â Compared to E4 Ektachrome, the Anscochrome probably held up better. Â I have a few slides that my father took in the early 1950s on Anscocolor that lasted longer than Ektachrome E4 process from 1960. Â The anecdotes were probably Ansco versus Kodachrome. Â
At one time Lancaster city had four camera stores and one was an Ansco dealer. Â Even he admitted that it was difficult to sell the Blue and Red boxes. Â He said, "The yellow box sells." Â But both of them had similar black and white papers and chemistry. Â They all, for example, developed buffered borax developers in the 1930s for moderately fine grain work. Â Why? Â Because Ernst Leitz and others were developing miniature cameras to use motion picture size film (35mm) in casettes and we needed something to get a little more detail out of the negatives. Â Â Agfa Ansco's formula book called their's Developer number 17. Â Kodak called their's D-76. Â They were essentially the same thing. Â i imagine if I could find a Dupont or a Gevaert formula book, I would find a similar product. Â In time everything in this country disappeared except for Kodak and imports from Germany or Japan. Â
On the subject of black and white, it has been about 13 years since I last exposed and processed a roll of film. Â The last roll I took was when I was asked to come to my 40th high school reunion with a camera. Â We are now up to 53 years. Â I've printed black and white negatives within the last month but I have not exposed any. Â
Preferred? Â I used Kodachrome until it became obvious to me that it wasn't going to survive and then I switched to Fuji Astia about two or three years before the final demise of the Kodak product. Â I still have some unexposed Kodachrome if anyone wants to make a remember when display. Â Use depends on how many trips I take in a year. Â Last year I didn't even use an entire brick of film. Â This year I'm thinking of driving to Salt Lake City for the August 7th opening of the two light rail lines ... might use up 10 rolls on that trip. Â I think we got wiped out of the Japan trip but now several of us are talking a month in either France or Italy next year and that ought to be good for 20 or so rolls of slides. Â I will probably take both slides and digital. Â
Finally bought a Nikon D-90 a few years ago. Â The uncredited photo of 4398 in a recent trains magazine was taken by me with the D-90. Â I also bought a Canon printer a few months ago but it still sits here unconnected. Â One of these days I'll wire it in and make some prints. Â
There just seem to be so many other things that get in the way ... painting the kitchen ceiling, trips, naps. Â
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