Right, the "Ribba" frames. They look good, the price is right, and they come in 5"x5" format, which is what I get my 6x6 proofs printed in anyway. The mats can be a little wonky, though, so you have to hunt for the good ones. Highly recommended!
t On 12/23/02 4:43 AM, David Chang-Sang wrote: > I kept this in mind as I was shopping for Christmas presents this year. > I found that Ikea carries frames that are square, almost specifically for > 6x6 images. > As you know, Ikea isn't that pricey, so if you need frames for the images, > head to Ikea. > > Cheers, > Dave > > P.S. No, I don't work for Ikea :) > > > -----Original Message----- > From: David Brooks [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] > Sent: Monday, December 23, 2002 7:32 AM > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: Re: Re: 6x6 - Waste of Space? (WAS: Re: Medium Format-Which one > is best?) > > > I had Aaron(yep he's still around<g>)make 4 enlargments this summer > from the Y-M and they looked great printed at 8x8.I find i am trying > to frame the shot so as to be able to print whats on the neg.ie no > neg crop. > The Y-M's do not have extra lenses wereas the Mamyia C220 and 330 > do.I may look into that system(along with the other three others<g>) > You are correct in paper waste but i seem to waste a lot more > getting digital right somedays:) > > Dave > ---- Begin Original Message ---- > > From: "William Robb" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > If you want an 8x10, you are cropping the neg, if you want to > print full frame and are using single sheets of paper, you are > trimming the print. > Most labs now use roll paper, so they just advance the amount of > paper they need to make the print as ordered. > > William Robb > > > > > >

