Bill:
Is your concern for a contracted negative (N-1, N-2, etc) that the neg will be so flat or have such reduced local contrast that even the higher paper grade won't be able to restore a healthy looking print?
I really don't intend to go further than N-1 when contracting negatives. For reasons of local contrast, I think I'd rather be inclined to use a compensating film formula.
I think what I may do is aim for Grade 3 printing with an adjusted version of Ansco 130, substantially reducing the Hydroquinone. If I want less contrast, I can drop to Grade 2, perhaps putting back hydroquinone if needed for a split grade. If I want more, I can restore the hydroquinone with grade 3 and also use a higher concentration. Grade 4 is also easier to find than grade 1. Softer negs have served me well for travel portraiture where you have to work quickly and don't have time to perfectly zone out every negative.
With an existing negative I'm also going to test a couple VC papers (MCC and Oriental VC) against Galerie to check how my WD2D+ negs print, especially in the highlights. If the VC papers behave best, I can aim for Grade 2 1/2, stop worrying and move on. VC papers may have more of a future as well.
...unless the analog photography market collapses altogether and we eventually have to coat our own papers...
J
Is your concern for a contracted negative (N-1, N-2, etc) that the neg will be so flat or have such reduced local contrast that even the higher paper grade won't be able to restore a healthy looking print?
I really don't intend to go further than N-1 when contracting negatives. For reasons of local contrast, I think I'd rather be inclined to use a compensating film formula.
I think what I may do is aim for Grade 3 printing with an adjusted version of Ansco 130, substantially reducing the Hydroquinone. If I want less contrast, I can drop to Grade 2, perhaps putting back hydroquinone if needed for a split grade. If I want more, I can restore the hydroquinone with grade 3 and also use a higher concentration. Grade 4 is also easier to find than grade 1. Softer negs have served me well for travel portraiture where you have to work quickly and don't have time to perfectly zone out every negative.
With an existing negative I'm also going to test a couple VC papers (MCC and Oriental VC) against Galerie to check how my WD2D+ negs print, especially in the highlights. If the VC papers behave best, I can aim for Grade 2 1/2, stop worrying and move on. VC papers may have more of a future as well.
...unless the analog photography market collapses altogether and we eventually have to coat our own papers...
J

