Now available from
your digital file Silver Halide Prints. This is the same
print you would receive from your negative..
The primary element for light capture in photography is the
silver halide crystal. When exposed to light, this crystal
forms a small, stable "latent image" that is highly amplified
during photographic development. In black-and-white
photography the reduced metallic silver forms the image. In
color photography, the oxidized developer is used to create a
colored image in register with the developed silver.
Sensitivity to
light, or photographic speed, is one of the most important
attributes of the emulsion. Intrinsic sensitivity is typically
enhanced during manufacture by a heat treatment in the
presence of tiny amounts of sulfur and gold compounds
(chemical sensitization). Organic dyes, usually cyanine dyes,
are then applied to the crystal surface to extend the basic UV
and blue sensitivity to other colors in the visible spectrum
(spectral sensitization). Different layers in a color film
contain emulsions that have been dyed to respond selectively
to blue, green, and red light, thus making color photography
possible.
The
silver halide emulsion literally "sets the scene" for the
subsequent complex chemical processes that lead to the
formation of a colorful image. The perennial challenge to
Kodak’s emulsion scientists is to increase film speed while
maintaining image quality and keeping performance.
|
Prints From Digital (Silver Halide) |
|
SIZE |
|
|
|
|
Wallet |
$ .49 |
8 x 12 |
$7.50 |
|
3½ x 5 |
.49 |
11 x 14 |
32.00 |
|
4 x 5 |
1.25 |
16 x 20 |
32.00 |
|
4 x 6 |
.49 |
20 x 24 |
42.00 |
|
5 x 5 |
1.25 |
20 x 30 |
58.00 |
|
5 x 7 |
2.95 |
24 x 30 |
98.00 |
|
7 x 10 |
6.00 |
24 x36 |
130.00 |
|
8 x 10 |
6.00 |
30
x 40 |
130.00 |
We offer scanning of all film formats and photos.
We also do restoration.
Scanning Mounted Slides
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