Ed Sukach
Member
One other "weird" thought, just crossed my consciousness... What color is the surface of the paper you are using, in ambient light?
Ed Sukach said:Back to basics:
You mentioned that you cannot get "contrast" ... that there are neither "white" whites or "black" blacks ... everything is an intermediate shade of grey.
CAN you get a "black" - completely BLACK, black? .....
...... either you do NOT have enough negative contrast (no matter how they scan), or something weird is happening with the enlarger/ filters. Try placing one of the gelatin filters over a contact print, in ambient light. If you still cannot get decent contrast after "playing" with the exposure ... you have to have a uniquely sensitive scanner that will correct for unusually thin negatives.
Gerald Koch said:Since you haven't done printing for some years is it possible that you are pulling your prints too soon? This would prevent them from achieving sufficient contrast. Prints need to continue to develop for 2 to 3 times the length of time it takes for the image to appear.
Wayne said:are you printing on the right side of the paper?
glbeas said:Have you looked inside your enlarger lens for trash or fungus? If that is good it may be your scanner is auto compensating for a bad neg, I know I can pull stuff out of a poor neg I'd have an impossible time printing on regular print paper with my scanner.
'Course that don't help me much if I want a print, you know what that digital stuff looks like...
Hlop said:I've got both lenses serviced when I just bought the enlarger because there were some dust particles and fogging from storage in the garage. Fortunately, no fungus at all.
OK. Let's start from the beginningWhat is a poor neg? Too dense? Too thin? I've got something in between. It isn't contrast but in the past I used to get good results from such negs using proper grade of paper. Now, with all this multigrade papers and filters all things are more flexible but well more confusing and as in any versatile system there are too many points of failure
A poor neg can be either too thin or too dense. A poor neg may lack information in either the shadows or have blocked highlight densities which is a result of improper exposure or development. If it has adequate shadow and highlight detail, it lacks inadequate density range (from the shadow densities to the high light densities to print properly on the material or paper that you choose to print it on. It must have this density range in order to print with the proper contrast. It is not enough to have detail. It must also have contrast.
That's why I've returned to film from digital and now trying to print
Hlop said:I don't have unique scanner it's mid-range Epson 4990 and I'm getting not bad results with it. As I said before I don't beleive that average scanner can produce better results than higher than average enlarger
I would not depend on time to determine whether a print is correctly developed. Times are dependent on a number of things such as temperature, condition of the developer (as you mention), dilution, paper, etc. It is better to develop by inspection knowing what a correctly developed print looks like in the bath.Hlop said:I'm developing, as recommended by Ilford for Ilford Multigrade developer and RC papers, for a time between 1' and 1'30" (end of session when developer is weakened) to avoid under- or overdeveloping
Gerald Koch said:BTW, it is very difficult to over-develop a print. The reason for this is that prints are developed to completion and after they are correctly developed there is little change in density or contrast even when the print is left for an extended period.
Developing blank paper is not the same as developing a print. It will not behave the same way because it has not been exposed. Increasing the development time will increase contrast up to a point and then begin to lower it due to overall fog formation. However, one would not usually leave the print for that long. There is a point where a print may appear done when it still needs a bit more time. That is what I was referring to.Hlop said:I wouldn't agree with this statement. Try to develop few unexposed pieces of paper, initially marking them 1,2,3,4 and 5 and develop them with same time in minutes as they are marked, then stop, fix and completely dry them. Accordingly to conditions you've described above (paper, developer, temperature etc) you'll notice changes in tone probably between 3 and 4 or possibly between 4 and 5 minutes. This happens when exceed maximum developing time and on print it will look like a lack of contrast and fogging
Overdeveloping is the enemy of the contrast. If there is already lack of contrast then you'll make it worse even if overdeveloping changes it very slightly
Me tooelpuri said:So what's the verdict on the negs? I'm just dying to know...![]()
Hlop said:Me tooNo feedback from Donald Miller yet
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