Thanks, the paper we gonna try out is called Kodak Endura Metallic, lasts a 100 years on display & 200 in an album and its a RA4 colour print paper
Feroze ----- Original Message ----- From: "Bruce Rubenstein" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Tuesday, January 14, 2003 9:40 PM Subject: Re: Col or mono with digital (was: Re: I want to start a WAR) > It has "always" been possible to do a B&W print from color negative film > (I think that Kodak made Panalure (?) paper specifically for this. A > color negative records each of the colors separately. So it has the same > information as a B&W negative, but you can select different aspects of > it. The biggest difference between color and chromogenic B&W film a > traditional B&W film is that color/chromogenic has a dye cloud structure > rather than a silver grain one, so the look can be quite different. > > BR > > [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > >But what happens to a colour neg when its printed in black & white. My local > >says > >he can print a colour neg as black & white. Does a proper B&W neg have > >different > >info than a colour one? My understanding on negs is that it has 3 layers on > >top of one > >another and a B&W is one. Am I missunderstanding this? > > > > > > >

