timeUnit
Member
Hi!
I have a print that looks OK on Agfa MCC 118, but not on Adox Fine Print Vario Classic. On Agfa I get good separation in the skin tones and highlights. On Adox I get a uniform grey in the high value skin tones.
I have gotten lovely results on the Adox paper before, see my gallery. That print glows, IMO.
Look at the attachments. They are both neg scans made to approximate what I get on Agfa and Adox, respectively (prints don't fit in scanner).
What can I do to get better tones on the Adox paper? Should I increase contrast or lower it?
I don't want to use the Agfa paper because of its surface. I prefer a gloss surface on this shot.
In hindsight I should have placed the softbox in a slightly different angle, to avoid the reflections in his skin. I was too occupied with the sparks to think about that...
I have a print that looks OK on Agfa MCC 118, but not on Adox Fine Print Vario Classic. On Agfa I get good separation in the skin tones and highlights. On Adox I get a uniform grey in the high value skin tones.
I have gotten lovely results on the Adox paper before, see my gallery. That print glows, IMO.
Look at the attachments. They are both neg scans made to approximate what I get on Agfa and Adox, respectively (prints don't fit in scanner).
What can I do to get better tones on the Adox paper? Should I increase contrast or lower it?
I don't want to use the Agfa paper because of its surface. I prefer a gloss surface on this shot.
In hindsight I should have placed the softbox in a slightly different angle, to avoid the reflections in his skin. I was too occupied with the sparks to think about that...