Acutance, micro-contrast, border effect, Mackie lines, Eberhard effect... There's lot of terms describing pretty much same thing: The sharp contrast change on small area, usually giving fringe effect to the contrast edge thus working like USM in digital environment.
Okay, it's there.
Then comes the real world.
I have personally used various developers that favors acutance or are even designed to enhange it (heavily dilited Rodinal, DiXactol, Pyrocat-HD, ..)
But to be honest, I have never seen the effect on my prints. Ofcourse, I haven't done any side by side comparison with a negative having same subject and film, but another frame developed in d76/xtol and another developed in non solvent or acutance developer.
There might be other causes also, like poor focusing (is my grain focuser really properly adjusted?).
I used diluted rodinal (1+100 - 1+200) for a years with APX-25 without knowing actually it's capability to give acutance, especially with faster films. Then I came across with Thornton's book Edge of Darkness. It blew my mind.
That was the first time I really came familiar with acutance and the photographs on the book were so sharp!
This leads to title I gave to this thread: Has anyone seen Thornton's prints. Are they really that sharp as repros in the book?
Or more interesting question: Do you have own prints that really shines in the terms of perceived sharpness? :confused:
Something that's on the bar with the pictures of the Edge of darkness or unsharp masked scans/digital photos that we can see in photography magazines (often way too much sharpened with huge halos).
Okay, it's there.
Then comes the real world.
I have personally used various developers that favors acutance or are even designed to enhange it (heavily dilited Rodinal, DiXactol, Pyrocat-HD, ..)
But to be honest, I have never seen the effect on my prints. Ofcourse, I haven't done any side by side comparison with a negative having same subject and film, but another frame developed in d76/xtol and another developed in non solvent or acutance developer.
There might be other causes also, like poor focusing (is my grain focuser really properly adjusted?).
I used diluted rodinal (1+100 - 1+200) for a years with APX-25 without knowing actually it's capability to give acutance, especially with faster films. Then I came across with Thornton's book Edge of Darkness. It blew my mind.
That was the first time I really came familiar with acutance and the photographs on the book were so sharp!
This leads to title I gave to this thread: Has anyone seen Thornton's prints. Are they really that sharp as repros in the book?
Or more interesting question: Do you have own prints that really shines in the terms of perceived sharpness? :confused:
Something that's on the bar with the pictures of the Edge of darkness or unsharp masked scans/digital photos that we can see in photography magazines (often way too much sharpened with huge halos).


