"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
And... handcut Rubylith, NuArc vertical camera (antique enlarger before that)...
Quote from: Doug B on September 18, 2012, 07:14:24 AMAnd... handcut Rubylith, NuArc vertical camera (antique enlarger before that)...Oh yeah, though my camera was a 22 x 18 horizontal, and a NuArc arc lamp. Rubylith, shading film, I even had to tray develop films when I first started.
Quote from: Sbrem on September 18, 2012, 10:10:45 AMQuote from: Doug B on September 18, 2012, 07:14:24 AMAnd... handcut Rubylith, NuArc vertical camera (antique enlarger before that)...Oh yeah, though my camera was a 22 x 18 horizontal, and a NuArc arc lamp. Rubylith, shading film, I even had to tray develop films when I first started.All was tray when I started. Of course, especially with halftone work, tray developing allowed for some adjustments and tweaks.PMT was something I learned in school, but didn't use in this biz at first, but needed for making mock up positioning stats for layout when I was a temporary fill-in grunt at Rolling Stone.btw young'uns, it's not just the ease of making positives without a camera that changed, but converting continuous tone to halftones was a process all on its own, with expensive and easily damaged overlay sheets placed directly over the film during the camera exposure process.Eventually, PMT was all I used in my own dark room. A real space saver!(Wanna buy my Agfa?) In fact, this is the year I finally pull it out and give to the neighbor who sells scrap! Regain a little more closet space.
Frog; I almost totallly forgot about PMT. I must be getting too old.
One thing is for sure. Graphics arts cameras notwithstanding, don't throw anything away!The rich young folks will buy all of your junk as retro-cool! Church key? Oil Spout? Typewriter? Lawn Darts? can you say ebay?The same lp's (that's long playing records) that I bought for a quarter when CD's took over, are often going for as much as one hundred times that now!(your results may vary )