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ADOX

The ADOX brand for photographic purposes has been used by three different companies since its original conception over one hundred fifty years ago. ADOX was originally a brand name used by the German company, Fotowerke Dr. C. Schleussner GmbH of Frankfurt am Main, the world's first photographic materials manufacturer. In 1962 the Schleussner family sold its photographic holdings to DuPont, an American company. DuPont used the brand for its subsidiary, Sterling Diagnostic Imaging for X-ray films. In 1999, Sterling was bought by the German company Agfa. Agfa did not use the brand and allowed its registration to lapse in 2003. Fotoimpex of Berlin, Germany, a company founded in 1992 to import photographic films and papers from former eastern Europe immediately registered the brand and today ADOX is a brand of black and white films, photographic papers and photochemistry produced by ADOX Fotowerke GmbH based in Bad Saarow near Berlin.

ADOX 66 camera (1950)

History edit

Fotowerke Dr. C. Schleussner GmbH (1860 - 1962) edit

ADOX was originally a brand name used by the German company, Fotowerke Dr. C. Schleussner GmbH of Frankfurt am Main, the world's first photographic materials manufacturer.[1] The company's founder, Dr. Carl Schleussner, did pioneering work on the wet-collodion process during the early years of photography, and formed his manufacturing company in 1860. Working with the physicist Wilhelm Röntgen, discoverer of X-rays, Dr. Schleussner invented the first X-ray plate.

The Schleussner firm began marketing cameras under the ADOX brand name in the first third of the 20th century and, recognizing the growing importance of the brand, renamed itself "Adox Fotowerke Dr. C. Schleussner GmbH." In 1952 they introduced a line of very sharp black and white 35 mm films under the ADOX brand.

DuPont & Agfa (1962 - 2003) edit

In 1962, the Schleussner family sold its photographic holdings to DuPont, an American company. DuPont became owners of the trademark, and registered it in the United States.

In the 1970s, Dupont licensed the Adox film technology, but not the trademark, and sold the coating plant with 'dip and dunk' machinery of their film to Fotokemika, Samobor, Croatia (at the time Yugoslavia) in 1972 who continued to produce the traditional black and white films according to the 1950s ADOX formulas under the Efke brand. (See List of discontinued photographic films). The Efke black & white KB (135) and R (120) films in 3 speeds (ISO 25, 50 and 100) were noted for their wide-latitude, smooth grain, great tonality, incredible sharpness and being capable of high contrast results.[2] In particular the slowest speed film KB 25 was laid down as a single layer emulsion. The films were low cost but due to their soft emulsion were prone to scratching during processing as well as quality issues.

DuPont kept the Adox trademark, transferring it to a subsidiary, Sterling Diagnostic Imaging, for its Adox brand X-ray films. DuPont still applies it to an industrial chemical, sodium chlorite.

In 1999, Sterling was bought by the German company Agfa, and was absorbed into Agfa's Health Sciences unit. In this roundabout way, the Adox photographic trademark once again briefly became German. Agfa did not use the Adox trademark, and the mark was removed from the German Patent Office trademark registry in March, 2003. It was almost immediately revived by companies in Canada, the United States, and Fotoimpex in Germany.

ADOX Fotowerke GmbH (2003 on) edit

The current rights to the ADOX name were obtained in 2003 by Fotoimpex of Berlin, Germany, a company founded in 1992 to import photographic films and papers from former eastern Europe. In particular they imported the Efke KB films and sold them branded as 'ADOX CHS Art' thus finally re-uniting the ADOX name with the original Schleussner film formula.

Fotoimpex established the ADOX Fotowerke GmbH film factory in Bad Saarow outside Berlin to convert and package their films, papers and chemicals using machinery acquired from the closed AGFA (Leverkusen, Germany) and Forte Photochemical Industry (Hungary) photographic plants.

ADOX test-produced a slightly improved version of the original AGFA APX 400 as ADOX Pan 400 during 2010.[3]

After Fotokemikas closure in 2012 due to failure of the original film making machinery proving too expensive to repair, Fotoimpex had ADOX CHS II (100 ISO, equivalent to Efke KB 100) black and white film produced using modern cascade coating. This took priority over proposals to re-introduce Agfa APX 400.

In February 2015 they purchased/obtained a long lease on the former Ilford Imaging, Switzerland (Ciba Geigy) machine E, medium scale coating line at Marly, Switzerland to coat photographic film and paper. Trial coating for ADOX CHS (II) was undertaken at Marly prior to its re-introduction in 2018.[4][5][6] The plant has also been used for testing the proposed revival of Polywarmtone Paper last produced by Forte in Hungary.[7]

ADOX are also (2017–19) doubling the size of the film factory in Bad Saarow, Germany to add a small coating line using a former AGFA machine as well as space for small scale chemical production and film materials storage.[8]

Current Products edit

ADOX Fotowerke GmbH produces a range of black and white films, photographic paper and photochemistry. The company has notably resurrected former ADOX films and AGFA films, paper and chemicals including the entire Agfa B&W chemistry line with the help of its former employees and it now holds the trademark in Europe and USA for the famous (Agfa) Rodinal film developer. It also sells newer more 'eco-friendly products'. Chemistry is produced in house in their factory.

Films edit

  • CMS 20 II ISO 20 An Agfa-Gevaert ortho micro film converted by ADOX offering very high resolution, needing special developer to tame contrast for normal pictures. Format: 135, 120*
  • CHS II 100 ISO The original ADOX R/KB21 film (Efke KB100 to 2012) classic 1950s ortho-panchromatic B&W print film. Introduced 2013 as a modern coating on a polyester base, but sold out by 2016. It was not re-introduced until 2018, initially as sheet film. Format: 135*, 120*, Sheet film.
  • Silvermax 100 ISO panchromatic B&W print film on a triacetate base (Similar to the original Agfa APX 100). Format: 135
  • SCALA 160 ISO panchromatic B&W reversal film (Same film as Silvermax) Format:135
  • HR-50 50 ISO Super-panchromatic ultra fine grain - Agfa-Gevaert Aviphot 80 modified to enhance usability. May also be used as an infra-red film with suitable filtration. Introduced 2018[9] Format: 135
  • IR-HR PRO 50 ISO 80. Super-panchromatic fine grain film - Agfa-Gevaert Aviphot 80 as HR-50 without modification. Initial trial batch introduced 2018.[10] Format: 135

(*current unavailable)

Photographic Paper edit

  • MCC 110. Fibre based paper (As for Agfa Multicontrast Classic) emulsion made using original Agfa machinery.
  • MCP 310. Premium Resin Coated photopaper with outstanding image quality (As for Agfa Multicontrast Classic) emulsion made using original Agfa machinery.
  • Fine Print Variotone. A newly developed warmtone paper made in cooperation with Harman Technology and Wolfgang Moersch
  • Lupex. A slow speed contact fibre paper made with a silver chloride emulsion and replaces Kodak Azo or Fomalux.

Other Photographic Paper edit

  • Art Baryta. Pure uncoated baryta base for coating with liquid emulsions
  • Fibre Baryta. Inkjet paper using fibre-base from analog photo paper manufacturing (100% alphacellulose with a barium-sulfate coating) and is coated with an inkjet receiving layer plus a backside coating to minimize curling behavior.
  • Fibre Monojet. An inkjet media optimized for the reproduction of black and white images.

Film Developers edit

  • RODINAL Liquid concentrate developer dating from 1891 and produced according to Agfa Leverkusen's latest Rodinal formula from 2004
  • ATOMAL 49. Powder based Universal ultra-finegrain developer for all types of B/W materials with good speed utilisation and high compensating factor. (Development of Agfa Atomal with currently available chemistry)
  • FX 39 II. Geoffry Crawleys FX-39 was a development of Willi Beutler's formula for Neofin Red.
  • Silvermax Developer. Specially formulated to increase tonal range in the Silvermax 21 film, formulated by SPUR
  • XT-3. An two-part powder developer equivalent to Kodak Xtol.

Paper Developers edit

  • ADOTOL NE. Liquid concentrate Neutral black working paper developer. Former Agfa developer
  • NEUTOL WA. Liquid concentrate warm tone paper developer. Former Agfa developer
  • MCC Developer. Liquid concentrate fine art developer For Multigrade Papers for neutral-black image tones. Former Agfa developer
  • NEUTOL ECO. Liquid concentrate without hydroquinine based on ascorbic acid.
  • ADOTOL KONSTANT Powder developer, which produces a neutral-black image tone
  • RA-4 Kit Liquid concentrate colour paper developer kit

Other Chemicals edit

  • ADOSTOP ECO (2018) Liquid concentrate 100% citric acid based odourless stop bath.
  • Acetic Acid 60% Acetic acid liquid concentrate for stop baths.
  • ADOFIX Plus Liquid concentrate, high capacity express-fixer with maximum capacity for black and white photo papers (RC and fibre), films and photographic plates.
  • ADOFLO Highly liquid concentrated wetting agent
  • ADOSTAB Liquid concentrate, image stabilizer and wetting agent.
  • SELENTONER Selenium toner for black and white photomaterials (films or paper)

Discontinued Products edit

Produced by ADOX Fotowerke Dr. C. Schleussner GmbH.

Cameras edit

135 format

  • Adrette, name variant of the Wirgin Edinex
  • Adox 300
  • Adox 500, prototypes
  • Golf I (1964)
  • Golf IA
  • Golf IIA
  • Golf IIIA
  • ADOX Polo
  • Polo 1S
  • Polomat
  • Polomatic

6 x 6 Box

  • ADOX 66
  • Adox Blitz

6 x 6 Folding

  • Golf I
  • Golf II
  • Golf IV
  • Mess-Golf I
  • Mess-Golf II
  • Mess-Golf IV
  • Golf 63 (1954–59)
  • Golf 63 S
  • Golf 45 S

6 x 9

  • Adox Sport (6x9 + 6x4.5)
  • Adox Start (1950)

Films edit

  • ADOX KB 14 / R14 (1952 -1973) Ortho-panchromatic B&W print film
  • ADOX KB 17 / R17 (1952 -1973) Ortho-panchromatic B&W print film
  • ADOX KB 21 / R21 (1952 -1973) Ortho-panchromatic B&W print film
  • ADOX C15 (1958) Color reversal film
  • ADOX C17 (?) Color reversal film

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 5 June 2014. Retrieved 8 July 2014.
  2. ^ "Film stock review: Efke KB-25 in 35mm format". 9 September 2015.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 14 October 2013. Retrieved 1 June 2014.
  4. ^ "The best things in life are analog | ADOX acquires Ilford´s medium scale coating machine".
  5. ^ "L'homme qui redonne vie à la Machine E d'Ilford". La Gruyere (in French). 9 March 2018. Retrieved 23 March 2023.
  6. ^ "The best things in life are analog | CHS 100 II Sheetfilm available again".
  7. ^ "The best things in life are analog | Final Polywarmtone Layer Build up".
  8. ^ "The best things in life are analog | Agfa Coating Table mooved into the new building".
  9. ^ "ADOX HR-50 High Resolution Film" (PDF). fotoimpex.com. Retrieved 23 March 2023.
  10. ^ "Fotoimpex Berlin - the Analogue Photography Specialists".

Sources edit

The text of this article has been adapted with permission from information published at

External links edit

adox, computer, programming, activex, data, objects, brand, photographic, purposes, been, used, three, different, companies, since, original, conception, over, hundred, fifty, years, originally, brand, name, used, german, company, fotowerke, schleussner, gmbh,. For ADOX in computer programming see ActiveX Data Objects The ADOX brand for photographic purposes has been used by three different companies since its original conception over one hundred fifty years ago ADOX was originally a brand name used by the German company Fotowerke Dr C Schleussner GmbH of Frankfurt am Main the world s first photographic materials manufacturer In 1962 the Schleussner family sold its photographic holdings to DuPont an American company DuPont used the brand for its subsidiary Sterling Diagnostic Imaging for X ray films In 1999 Sterling was bought by the German company Agfa Agfa did not use the brand and allowed its registration to lapse in 2003 Fotoimpex of Berlin Germany a company founded in 1992 to import photographic films and papers from former eastern Europe immediately registered the brand and today ADOX is a brand of black and white films photographic papers and photochemistry produced by ADOX Fotowerke GmbH based in Bad Saarow near Berlin ADOX 66 camera 1950 Contents 1 History 1 1 Fotowerke Dr C Schleussner GmbH 1860 1962 1 2 DuPont amp Agfa 1962 2003 1 3 ADOX Fotowerke GmbH 2003 on 2 Current Products 2 1 Films 2 2 Photographic Paper 2 3 Other Photographic Paper 2 4 Film Developers 2 5 Paper Developers 2 6 Other Chemicals 3 Discontinued Products 3 1 Cameras 3 2 Films 4 See also 5 References 6 Sources 7 External linksHistory editFotowerke Dr C Schleussner GmbH 1860 1962 edit ADOX was originally a brand name used by the German company Fotowerke Dr C Schleussner GmbH of Frankfurt am Main the world s first photographic materials manufacturer 1 The company s founder Dr Carl Schleussner did pioneering work on the wet collodion process during the early years of photography and formed his manufacturing company in 1860 Working with the physicist Wilhelm Rontgen discoverer of X rays Dr Schleussner invented the first X ray plate The Schleussner firm began marketing cameras under the ADOX brand name in the first third of the 20th century and recognizing the growing importance of the brand renamed itself Adox Fotowerke Dr C Schleussner GmbH In 1952 they introduced a line of very sharp black and white 35 mm films under the ADOX brand DuPont amp Agfa 1962 2003 edit In 1962 the Schleussner family sold its photographic holdings to DuPont an American company DuPont became owners of the trademark and registered it in the United States In the 1970s Dupont licensed the Adox film technology but not the trademark and sold the coating plant with dip and dunk machinery of their film to Fotokemika Samobor Croatia at the time Yugoslavia in 1972 who continued to produce the traditional black and white films according to the 1950s ADOX formulas under the Efke brand See List of discontinued photographic films The Efke black amp white KB 135 and R 120 films in 3 speeds ISO 25 50 and 100 were noted for their wide latitude smooth grain great tonality incredible sharpness and being capable of high contrast results 2 In particular the slowest speed film KB 25 was laid down as a single layer emulsion The films were low cost but due to their soft emulsion were prone to scratching during processing as well as quality issues DuPont kept the Adox trademark transferring it to a subsidiary Sterling Diagnostic Imaging for its Adox brand X ray films DuPont still applies it to an industrial chemical sodium chlorite In 1999 Sterling was bought by the German company Agfa and was absorbed into Agfa s Health Sciences unit In this roundabout way the Adox photographic trademark once again briefly became German Agfa did not use the Adox trademark and the mark was removed from the German Patent Office trademark registry in March 2003 It was almost immediately revived by companies in Canada the United States and Fotoimpex in Germany ADOX Fotowerke GmbH 2003 on edit The current rights to the ADOX name were obtained in 2003 by Fotoimpex of Berlin Germany a company founded in 1992 to import photographic films and papers from former eastern Europe In particular they imported the Efke KB films and sold them branded as ADOX CHS Art thus finally re uniting the ADOX name with the original Schleussner film formula Fotoimpex established the ADOX Fotowerke GmbH film factory in Bad Saarow outside Berlin to convert and package their films papers and chemicals using machinery acquired from the closed AGFA Leverkusen Germany and Forte Photochemical Industry Hungary photographic plants ADOX test produced a slightly improved version of the original AGFA APX 400 as ADOX Pan 400 during 2010 3 After Fotokemikas closure in 2012 due to failure of the original film making machinery proving too expensive to repair Fotoimpex had ADOX CHS II 100 ISO equivalent to Efke KB 100 black and white film produced using modern cascade coating This took priority over proposals to re introduce Agfa APX 400 In February 2015 they purchased obtained a long lease on the former Ilford Imaging Switzerland Ciba Geigy machine E medium scale coating line at Marly Switzerland to coat photographic film and paper Trial coating for ADOX CHS II was undertaken at Marly prior to its re introduction in 2018 4 5 6 The plant has also been used for testing the proposed revival of Polywarmtone Paper last produced by Forte in Hungary 7 ADOX are also 2017 19 doubling the size of the film factory in Bad Saarow Germany to add a small coating line using a former AGFA machine as well as space for small scale chemical production and film materials storage 8 Current Products editADOX Fotowerke GmbH produces a range of black and white films photographic paper and photochemistry The company has notably resurrected former ADOX films and AGFA films paper and chemicals including the entire Agfa B amp W chemistry line with the help of its former employees and it now holds the trademark in Europe and USA for the famous Agfa Rodinal film developer It also sells newer more eco friendly products Chemistry is produced in house in their factory Films edit CMS 20 II ISO 20 An Agfa Gevaert ortho micro film converted by ADOX offering very high resolution needing special developer to tame contrast for normal pictures Format 135 120 CHS II 100 ISO The original ADOX R KB21 film Efke KB100 to 2012 classic 1950s ortho panchromatic B amp W print film Introduced 2013 as a modern coating on a polyester base but sold out by 2016 It was not re introduced until 2018 initially as sheet film Format 135 120 Sheet film Silvermax 100 ISO panchromatic B amp W print film on a triacetate base Similar to the original Agfa APX 100 Format 135 SCALA 160 ISO panchromatic B amp W reversal film Same film as Silvermax Format 135 HR 50 50 ISO Super panchromatic ultra fine grain Agfa Gevaert Aviphot 80 modified to enhance usability May also be used as an infra red film with suitable filtration Introduced 2018 9 Format 135 IR HR PRO 50 ISO 80 Super panchromatic fine grain film Agfa Gevaert Aviphot 80 as HR 50 without modification Initial trial batch introduced 2018 10 Format 135 current unavailable Photographic Paper edit MCC 110 Fibre based paper As for Agfa Multicontrast Classic emulsion made using original Agfa machinery MCP 310 Premium Resin Coated photopaper with outstanding image quality As for Agfa Multicontrast Classic emulsion made using original Agfa machinery Fine Print Variotone A newly developed warmtone paper made in cooperation with Harman Technology and Wolfgang Moersch Lupex A slow speed contact fibre paper made with a silver chloride emulsion and replaces Kodak Azo or Fomalux Other Photographic Paper edit Art Baryta Pure uncoated baryta base for coating with liquid emulsions Fibre Baryta Inkjet paper using fibre base from analog photo paper manufacturing 100 alphacellulose with a barium sulfate coating and is coated with an inkjet receiving layer plus a backside coating to minimize curling behavior Fibre Monojet An inkjet media optimized for the reproduction of black and white images Film Developers edit RODINAL Liquid concentrate developer dating from 1891 and produced according to Agfa Leverkusen s latest Rodinal formula from 2004 ATOMAL 49 Powder based Universal ultra finegrain developer for all types of B W materials with good speed utilisation and high compensating factor Development of Agfa Atomal with currently available chemistry FX 39 II Geoffry Crawleys FX 39 was a development of Willi Beutler s formula for Neofin Red Silvermax Developer Specially formulated to increase tonal range in the Silvermax 21 film formulated by SPUR XT 3 An two part powder developer equivalent to Kodak Xtol Paper Developers edit ADOTOL NE Liquid concentrate Neutral black working paper developer Former Agfa developer NEUTOL WA Liquid concentrate warm tone paper developer Former Agfa developer MCC Developer Liquid concentrate fine art developer For Multigrade Papers for neutral black image tones Former Agfa developer NEUTOL ECO Liquid concentrate without hydroquinine based on ascorbic acid ADOTOL KONSTANT Powder developer which produces a neutral black image tone RA 4 Kit Liquid concentrate colour paper developer kit Other Chemicals edit ADOSTOP ECO 2018 Liquid concentrate 100 citric acid based odourless stop bath Acetic Acid 60 Acetic acid liquid concentrate for stop baths ADOFIX Plus Liquid concentrate high capacity express fixer with maximum capacity for black and white photo papers RC and fibre films and photographic plates ADOFLO Highly liquid concentrated wetting agent ADOSTAB Liquid concentrate image stabilizer and wetting agent SELENTONER Selenium toner for black and white photomaterials films or paper Discontinued Products editProduced by ADOX Fotowerke Dr C Schleussner GmbH Cameras edit 135 format Adrette name variant of the Wirgin Edinex Adox 300 Adox 500 prototypes Golf I 1964 Golf IA Golf IIA Golf IIIA ADOX Polo Polo 1S Polomat Polomatic 6 x 6 Box ADOX 66 Adox Blitz 6 x 6 Folding Golf I Golf II Golf IV Mess Golf I Mess Golf II Mess Golf IV Golf 63 1954 59 Golf 63 S Golf 45 S 6 x 9 Adox Sport 6x9 6x4 5 Adox Start 1950 Films edit ADOX KB 14 R14 1952 1973 Ortho panchromatic B amp W print film ADOX KB 17 R17 1952 1973 Ortho panchromatic B amp W print film ADOX KB 21 R21 1952 1973 Ortho panchromatic B amp W print film ADOX C15 1958 Color reversal film ADOX C17 Color reversal filmSee also editList of photographic films List of discontinued photographic filmsReferences edit About ADOX Archived from the original on 5 June 2014 Retrieved 8 July 2014 Film stock review Efke KB 25 in 35mm format 9 September 2015 Adox Pan 400 Archived from the original on 14 October 2013 Retrieved 1 June 2014 The best things in life are analog ADOX acquires Ilford s medium scale coating machine L homme qui redonne vie a la Machine E d Ilford La Gruyere in French 9 March 2018 Retrieved 23 March 2023 The best things in life are analog CHS 100 II Sheetfilm available again The best things in life are analog Final Polywarmtone Layer Build up The best things in life are analog Agfa Coating Table mooved into the new building ADOX HR 50 High Resolution Film PDF fotoimpex com Retrieved 23 March 2023 Fotoimpex Berlin the Analogue Photography Specialists Sources editThe text of this article has been adapted with permission from information published at 1 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to ADOX Official website Documents and clippings about ADOX in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title ADOX amp oldid 1149525000, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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