markbarendt
Member
There are several things that should be understood.
Pushing doesn't change the sensitivity of a film. Push development doesn't "fix" an underexposure.
The film exposure placement, say 200 or 1600, is normally almost irrelevant to the print. We need to remember that negatives aren't the final output, whether they look thin or thick is irrelevant, the second exposure settings (the exposure of the paper or digital process settings) and the paper grade are what really sets the look of the final output.
What we typically lose first with under exposure negatives is our ability to dodge for more detail.
Camera exposure controls the low detail point on negative, but that's not always relevant to the output, there is no absolute connection to the print because the printing exposure (or digital settings) is (are) fully adjustable. The fact that we can regularly/normally dodge a print exposure to improve shadow detail is proof of this.
Pushing, IMO, and I would suggest in-fact, is simply an alternative to using a harder paper; nothing more, nothing less. It doesn't create detail where none exists on the film, it only changes how the contrast looks on "normal" paper.
There is a lot of myth about photography.
People want to believe that what they do with camera exposure directly affects the print.
They want to believe that there is such a thing as perfect exposure.
They want to believe that somehow certain films are magic all by themselves.
They are not.
Don't mistake the latitude of the system for magic.
Pushing doesn't change the sensitivity of a film. Push development doesn't "fix" an underexposure.
The film exposure placement, say 200 or 1600, is normally almost irrelevant to the print. We need to remember that negatives aren't the final output, whether they look thin or thick is irrelevant, the second exposure settings (the exposure of the paper or digital process settings) and the paper grade are what really sets the look of the final output.
What we typically lose first with under exposure negatives is our ability to dodge for more detail.
Camera exposure controls the low detail point on negative, but that's not always relevant to the output, there is no absolute connection to the print because the printing exposure (or digital settings) is (are) fully adjustable. The fact that we can regularly/normally dodge a print exposure to improve shadow detail is proof of this.
Pushing, IMO, and I would suggest in-fact, is simply an alternative to using a harder paper; nothing more, nothing less. It doesn't create detail where none exists on the film, it only changes how the contrast looks on "normal" paper.
There is a lot of myth about photography.
People want to believe that what they do with camera exposure directly affects the print.
They want to believe that there is such a thing as perfect exposure.
They want to believe that somehow certain films are magic all by themselves.
They are not.
Don't mistake the latitude of the system for magic.