Fujifilm - Free Film Offer
Hire a Hasselblad Flextight film scanner at The Printspace for one hour and receive a free 5 roll pack of Fujicolor PRO Series 120 film. Photographers can choose from PRO160S, PRO160C and PRO400H film.
Launched in October 2007, The Printspace occupies two floors of a 4000sq foot area comprising of retouching booths, film scanners, walk-in print stations, large format digital C-type on Fujicolor Crystal Archive paper, Epson Giclée printers and an exhibition space. The Printspace’s ‘DIY’ concept gives photographers the ability to produce their own professional prints on the highest specification equipment with a user-oriented, creative approach to print production.
The Printspace is located at 74 Kingsland Road, London E2 8DL. For directions and further information, visit www.theprintspace.com call 020 7739 1060 or email info@theprintspace.com
All films in the Fujicolor PRO Series have been optimised for digital scanning, and give excellent performance when used for digitally printed images. The whole range offers fine grain and a wide exposure latitude. The PRO160S is a low contrast film, PRO160C is high contrast and the PRO400H is low contrast at a higher speed. They are ideal for photographers who want to combine the exceptional image quality of film with the flexibility that a digital workflow can offer.
For further information on Fujifilm’s range of professional films, visit www.fujifilm.co.uk/professional or email Jerry Deeney on jdeeney@fuji.co.uk
Written by Ajax on May 3rd, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on photography and photography and Film and Digital Art and Scanning and photography and photography and Fujifilm and photography and camera and Photographer and Camera Review.
Every so often, withdrawal sets in.
The tome in question is nothing special in photographic terms, but Cote D'Azur by Pierre Borel published at thirty five shillings (one pound seventy five pence to you.) by Nicholas Kaye of London in 1957, contains 169 b+w heliogravure printed photo illustrations.

Hardly any of the photographs are what one might label outstanding, but they have, nonetheless, the characteristic appeal of an era now well past; content is arranged in a more formal compositional way, the emphasis on each frame of directional and contrasting lighting effects brought to bear on a potter's hands, or to give extra dimension to an image by way of contre-jour, to the carpet weaver's labour of love. This is a collection of workaday travel photos, but they are endowed with a certain charm rarely seen today in the colourful interpretations of stock photographers.
The 1950s and early 1960s marked the end of a period during which this treatment proliferated across a wide range of subjects since the late 1920s. The French exploited the technique more delicately perhaps than the Brits, but in either camp,...
Written by admin on September 21st, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on Digital Art and Film and Black and white and Print media and Scanning and Fine art and photography and photography and camera and photography and Books and Photographer and photography and photography and Camera Review.
Photo archiving solutions
Jonathan Eastland
Processed Kodachrome slides have the highest rating of any colour reversal (diapositiv) photographic film for their dark storage capacity to maintain colour veracity over long periods.
Ideally, safe dark storage for this material would comprise inert polypropylene hanging files housed in solvent-free painted metal filing cabinets sited in a cool and dry environment. Professional archivists recommend refrigeration as the ultimate safe storage method, but this could get expensive for the 100,000 plus collection; like all power dependent devices, refrigeration units need regular and proper maintenance to ensure a trouble free life.
For many guardians and owners, archive storage technology stops with the standard office filing cabinet, its contents left to cope with seasonal changes in local climates forced upon it by the needs of library operators to stay warm in winter and cool in summer. Excessive temperature and relative humidity fluctuations can take years off the life of any image artifact, but can have particularly devastating short term effects on photographic film emulsions.
In 2005, I began another time consuming editing and cleaning task to rescue what I could from a large collection of 50 year old Kodachrome slides that were stored for nearly two decades of their life in the damp and windy attic of their author's home in west Britanny, France. Years of hot and cold, dry and damp conditions has taken its toll on a fascinating record of life in Indo China towards the end of French Colonial rule...
Written by admin on June 13th, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on Archive and photography and Film and Scanning and Kodachrome and photography and photography and photography and Kodak and camera and Photographer and photography and Camera Review.
Braun 4000 Scanning extra - 1
Jonathan Eastland
Kodak processed and card or plastic mounted Kodachrome slides batch scanned in the Braun 4000 supplied 50 cartridge cause few jamming problems when the mount, particularly card, remains undamaged; i.e. not bent, sliced apart and then re-sealed with Selotape (Scotch), or labels, and, not defaced with old, worn, dog eared or misaligned caption labels, especially those placed so that a small portion of the label extends beyond the edge of the mount.
It is best to carefully remove any such labels used in the process of analogue archiving as these add microns to the overall thickness of the mount. The tolerances of the Braun cartridge are small and the mounted slide needs to be able to move freely in the cartridge slot, otherwise it will most likely jam during a batch scanning session.
Thin press-stud type plastic mounts are probably those offering the most trouble free experience, but carefully removing slides from card mounts of almost any description and vintage is a tedious process, adding considerably to the time schedule of a 50 batch scan. Nonetheless, it's worth doing if you want to avoid even the most minor of hassles.
Attached to this post are some illustrations of the kind of thing to avoid together with a few showing best practice.
Good scanning....!
Click to continue reading "Braun 4000 Scanning extra - 1"
Written by admin on June 6th, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on Film and Archive and Scanning and Kodachrome and Braun and photography and photography and photography and Kodak and camera and photography and photography and Camera Review.

