This is
the second run of budget priced paper
marketed by Silverprint and has a matt finish. The first run was gloss. I have
used the later and was impressed with the photographs it produced. With its
grades being limited to two I was not put off.
|
Ilford FP4+,120 fromat 6x6 negative, Developed
in PMK Pyro and printed on
Silverproof paper Matt. |
I originally
purchased the gloss paper for contact prints and didn't really take much notice
of how well they were being produced until I obtained a 12 x 16 slottie (Nova
paper processor. which was the dirtiest bit of kit I have ever purchased second
hand, a story for another post). The silver proof paper was the largest sized
paper I had on the shelf and I was
impatient to see how well this new piece of kit worked. I was surprised
by the tonality of the paper which lead me to make a series of photographs. It
is a shame it was a limited retail run. It will missed.
Then a
second batch was announced on Matt paper, which is a finish I'm not a fan of,
but I'm always happy to try something new. This will also be a limited retail
run, so if matt is your preference get some boxes in while you can.
|
Ilford FP4+ 120 Format 6x6 negative, Developed
in PMK Pyro and Printed on
Silverproof paper Matt. |
The paper is
completely different from what I'm used to. It is difficult to tell which is
the emulsion side in the darkroom but with a little practice, the back has a
slight fibre feel to it which takes a
time to get the hang of. First impressions are good, the photographs remind me
of the cover page to Black and White Photography magazine in the way it looks
and feels but has a depth to it that ink cannot replicate. It also does not
have that richness of tone you get with gloss papers. Having said that, I like
the difference and expressiveness it gives to the pictures it produces.
|
Ilford FP4+ 120 format 6x6 negative, Developed
in PMK Pyro and printed on
Slverproof Paper Matt. |
The pictures
that complement this post were developed in a warm tone developer from Ilford
with the enlarger set at grade two, initially it was set at
grade three but I found that the pictures had to much contrast. On
hindsight it may have been better to use an un-toned developer, but then I was
not planing to use the proof paper for a full print session. I got carried away
after the first test prints and I'm pleased I did.