Since this process produces neither enlargements nor reductions, the image on the print is exactly the same size as the image on the
negative. Contact prints are used to produce proof sheets from entire rolls of 35 mm negative (from
135 film cassettes) and 120 (2 film rolls) in order to aid in the selection of images for further enlargement, and for cataloging and identification purposes. For
120 roll film (once a common negative size for popular cameras) and larger film, contact prints are often used to determine the final print size. In medium and
large format photography, contact prints are prized for their extreme fidelity to the negative, with exquisite detail that can be seen with the use of a
magnifying glass. A disadvantage to using contact prints in the fine-arts is the laboriousness of modifying exposure selectively, when the use of an
enlarger can achieve the same purpose. Because light does not pass any significant distance through the air or through
lenses in going from the negative to the print, the contact process ideally preserves all the detail that is present in the negative. However, the
exposure value (EV) range, the variation from darkest to lightest regions, is inherently greater in negatives than in prints. == Finished prints ==