Keith Tapscott.
Member
As Ralph mentioned, you might want to consider an enlarging meter considering the amount of paper you are using to get to the final print.I’m new to silver gelatin printing. I did a workshop recently, and today I had my first solo printing session. I picked a negative I wanted to work on, and 5 hours later, I was happy with the results. However, it took me 15 images to get there. I’m coming from platinum palladium printing with digital negatives, where, once my workflow is calibrated, I get the desired results every time in one shot. This is not the case with real negatives.
Today, I started with a test strip, followed by a test print, and then a few more with dodging and burning. I decided to try multigrade filters and split-grade to get details in both the shadows and highlights of the very contrasty negative. I experimented with several combinations until I achieved a print I liked. I finished the final print using split-grading, plus some dodging and burning.
I got an image I like, but it took a while. I’d appreciate advice on how to get quicker results without wasting so much paper and time, yet without sacrificing the quality. Today’s session alone used up 6 sheets of 11x14 Ilford MG FB WT paper, and I have at least 150-200 negatives I want to print. I'd be happy to reduce waste by at least 50%.
So, just to clarify, my question is about practical advices and techniques on how to achieve the desired results quicker, not necessarily how to save money by buying cheaper paper and chemistry.
How many images do you print? How many iterations does it take for you to get to the final print? Is my workflow right, and how can it be improved?
Thank you.

Enlarging meters, are they worth it?
Something I have considered for many years, but never got around to buying a state of the art enlarging meter. Do you find that you save on photo papers by using one? They are expensive, so I don't want to waste money if they are too much rigmarole to calibrate. It would be nice not to have to...
