Annie
Member
- Joined
- Mar 29, 2003
- Messages
- 273
You may not recall but I made that offer here some months ago
Drat... I missed the offer.... is there still a chance of acquiring 50 sheets of each grade?
You may not recall but I made that offer here some months ago
EricR said:Luke, may the force of the pulse xenon be with you. I may be a rube but I can't see how using AZO can be such a silver bullet. It's my understanding that you cannot utilize all the bullets available with conventional papers, like flashing, split grade printing, water bath development, selective contrast control, bleaching etc etc etc that master printers routinely use to produce stunning prints. Conventional papers and their chemistry is easily available and relatively cheap. And don't try and tell me you don't have to do all that stuff once you switch to AZO, I don't believe it for one minute. If AZO was so great all the best printers would be using it. They aren't so that speaks volumes to me anyway.
Michael A. Smith said:These statements make me wonder why Adams didnt use Azo more often. Surely he saw that it was a finer paper than the enlarging papers he was using.
jdef said:Just curious, have any of you ever seen a contact print made from a digital negative, and if so, what was your impression of it?
I think the book by Dan Burkholder indcates that it is possible to get the right neg for contact printing but not easily if you do not possess the right equipment. He has made a follow up article detailing a different technique which some people are using and getting good results although I have not seen this article yet.
jdef said:Well, that's encouraging, but what about the "soul" of these prints? Is there some indefinable quality lacking in these prints that would favor traditionally enlarged negatives?
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links. To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here. |
PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY: ![]() |