magenta is often used more than yellow in my case so you are correct. I like slightly meatier negatives.
I am with you Oscar. I try to get the negative right to avoid all that darkroom drama. If I can get what I want from mostly a straight print, I am happy.It sounds mostly like you don't want any answers but simply state something you take pride in - please do this in your blog or something instead.
To feed the obvious troll here - I prefer to raise the contrast instead of having to pre-flash to handle negatives with too high contrast. I prefer a negative with a slightly lower contrast.
Also, it all depends on how I'd like the print. If I want it soft...well no magenta here.
no I meant negatives with lots of density , and these negatives always require a magenta filter.Don't you mean prints.
It sounds mostly like you don't want any answers but simply state something you take pride in - please do this in your blog or something instead.
To feed the obvious troll here - I prefer to raise the contrast instead of having to pre-flash to handle negatives with too high contrast. I prefer a negative with a slightly lower contrast.
Also, it all depends on how I'd like the print. If I want it soft...well no magenta here.
I'm a bit confused by the comment that a dense negative requires high contrast to print...
It is totally irrelevant how much of one filter or the other a photographer uses.
The only thing that matters is that the print matches what the photographer wanted to create (with the proviso that the interpretation of the negative may well change over time).
In any other sphere of creativity, would anyone even ask such a question? - I think not. In my experience what people in other fields discuss is what is their opinion of the final result.
Bests,
David.
www.dsallen.de
I think a lot of people who choose to expose generously also develop a bit less, with a mind to keeping the highlights in check. So the result is a negative with a bit less contrast.I'm a bit confused by the comment that a dense negative requires high contrast to print...
Bill I do control the lighting ratio to 1:5 and not beyond so maybe this explains a bit.I'm a bit confused by the comment that a dense negative requires high contrast to print... I recently printed a negative with lots of density... and I printed it on Galerie Grade 2 paper.
My instinct tells me Bob Carnie is working with studio lighting which might be giving lower lighting ratios than my outdoor nature photography in the mountains.
And I do a bit of tailoring of negative development time to fit subject luminance range onto paper grade. I could give information about the subject brightness range and the negative density range and the characteristic curve of the film... and it all supports that I got what I aimed for...
But then even Andreas Feininger shows me that contrast is reduced when you overexpose. He was showing a print series from exposures of a clear light bulb over a range of exposures from minimum where you just see the filament to normal where it looks like a light bulb to overexposure until you get partial solarization (which looks just like Sabbatier effect) and onto complete solarization where the filament is black on the print and everything else is white.
So it must be that at some point you do lose contrast... But my exposures which are just a stop or two over minimum, print on normal paper.
I think a lot of people who choose to expose generously also develop a bit less, with a mind to keeping the highlights in check. So the result is a negative with a bit less contrast.
The increased density alone doesn't result in less contrast, unless you get way up in the shoulder of the curve.
Bill I do control the lighting ratio to 1:5 and not beyond so maybe this explains a bit.
Most of my negatives print with equal amounts of magenta and yellow. I guess I really don't understand this thread. It seems to be implied that using magenta is somehow virtuous.
Most of my negatives print with equal amounts of magenta and yellow. I guess I really don't understand this thread. It seems to be implied that using magenta is somehow virtuous.
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