[LargeFormat] Kodak TMX 4052
Jim Hemenway
largeformat@f32.net
Thu Aug 14 14:10:02 2003
Hi Jim:
Just got your post... after I responded to Les's Kodachrome suggestion.
I'll probably try the three filter method but will use PS on them. More
time consuming that 11x14 Ektachrome but less expensive.
I did this around 40 years ago but made the resulting 8x10 slides by
contact printing the negatives on an acetate material, which when stuck
into a big "pickle jar" with ammonia at the bottom, would develop out
into the appropriate color. I can't remember the name of the process. I
would then sandwich the 3 different colored "slides" onto an overhead
projector cardboard frame for projection and/or hand viewing.
--
Jim - http://www.hemenway.com
Jim Brick wrote:
> At 01:06 PM 8/14/2003 -0400, Jim Hemenway wrote:
>
>> Thanks for the info. How can I turn it into color negative film?
>
>
>
> Shoot three sheets of the subject, one sheet through a red filter, the
> second through a green filter, and the last through a blue filter (these
> must be primary color filters - for color separations). Available as
> Kodak gels. It would be best to have a pin registration system for your
> film in the holder and the holder in the camera.
>
> Process the three sheets as normal B&W negs.
>
> You now have color negatives that, when printed and processed
> sequentially (registered of course) on dye transfer or pigment transfer
> paper, you get gorgeous color prints...
>
> Just a thought...
>
> :-)
>
> Jim