Upon testing some previously washed and air dried
prints through the dryer, I noticed they do come out
glossier than just air dried. Not ferrotyped looking
but much more sheen to them than before. They were
soaked first and dried face down on the apron.
Eric
--- Bill Stephenson <photographica@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> Amateur stepping up to bat: *why* does no one
> ferrotype prints these
> days? With that rotten plastic paper, I can
> understand it, but
> there's still some good *real* paper (requiring the
> death of trees)
> out there. I always thought that an "F" (Kodak's
> designation for
> glossy) print, ferrotype-dried (hot or cold), was
> the bees knees for
> showing fine detail and incredibly long tonal scale.
> But...what do I
> know? I can't even be sure that I can get into
> trouble, although I'm
> a fair hand at messes.
>
> -Bill
>
=============================================================================================================
> To unsubscribe from this list, go to
> www.freelists.org and logon to your account (the
> same e-mail address and password you set-up when you
> subscribed,) and unsubscribe from there.
>
____________________________________________________________________________________
TV dinner still cooling?
Check out "Tonight's Picks" on Yahoo! TV.
http://tv.yahoo.com/
=============================================================================================================
To unsubscribe from this list, go to www.freelists.org and logon to your
account (the same e-mail address and password you set-up when you subscribed,)
and unsubscribe from there.