Dnia 20-01-2003 o godz. 4:31 tom napisal(a): > > -----Original Message----- > > From: Kevin Waterson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] > > > > At a recent camera club meeting some slides were > > shown in black and white, this caught my eye as > > I had not thought such a film was available? > > > > Is this the case? If so, how is this effect created? > > It's probably a film called Agfa Scala. > > Kodak also sells a kit for processing regular B+W as slides. It's > called the KODAK T-MAX 100 Direct Positive Film Developing Outfit, but > I think it can be tweaked for other films.
It could be Agfa Scala (ISO 200 B&W positive) as Tom pointed out http://www.agfa.com/photo/products/film/professional/bwrevfilm/ or a similiar product made by Czech foto factory FOMA - Fomopan R100 (ISO 100 B&W positive) http://www.foma.cz/en/prod/cbneg.htm http://www.foma.cz/en/tech_listy/F_pan_R.htm There is also a posibility of developing the negative in the process mentioned by Tom owhich will result in having a positive. I think a company called Tetenal also makes such a kit. And one more option I also encountered is shoting the B&W prints on color positive film. I've seen something like this done on Fuji Provia 100F and the results weren't that bad. Tonality suffers on such a process but when stuck between color slides the B&W ones were really catching the eye. Cheers Maciej ----------------------------------------------------------------------- Wszystko, czego potrzebuje nowoczesna kobieta! Diety, horoskopy, kosmetyczne nowości... www.polki.pl - najlepszy serwis kobiecy!

