Monica Schulz
Member
- Joined
- Feb 26, 2008
- Messages
- 4
- Format
- 35mm
Dear forum,
I´m quite new to photography and so I´m just studying the basics. By those means I stumbled upon the fact that color printing paper isn´t available in so many different grades as is b&w printing paper. So there isn´t as much contrast control in this field. Can someone explain me why this is the case?
Is it because contrast can´t be manipulated that much in color as in b&w. I came thinking about that after reading another old thread so I will use the important words of the relevant post.
To adjust contrast means to make the image brighter or darker. The
only way to do that is to make the dyes thinner. This lets more light
reflect off the paper. But as a dye gets, say, thinner it removes less
of its anti-color until it finally disappears and no anti-color is
removed. And the other way around if the dye gets thicker. So the
scale doesn´t go from, say, a dark magenta to a light magenta but from
dark magenta to white. Or from a saturated magenta to an unsaturated
magenta.
The digital process can compensate for this unwanted increase or
decrease in saturation if contrast is adjusted in the luminosity
channel of lab-mode. In this case neither hue nor saturation is beeing
changed. There is a nice little example of that on
http://www.cambridgeincolour.com/tutorials/photoshop-curves.htm. But
we can´t do the same in analog color printing.
It could well be that this is complete garbage as far as the
subtractive mixing of the analog process is concerned and if so I´d be
happy if someone tells me so that I can get this idea out of my head
and can think in another direction.
Best regards!
Monica Schulz
I´m quite new to photography and so I´m just studying the basics. By those means I stumbled upon the fact that color printing paper isn´t available in so many different grades as is b&w printing paper. So there isn´t as much contrast control in this field. Can someone explain me why this is the case?
Is it because contrast can´t be manipulated that much in color as in b&w. I came thinking about that after reading another old thread so I will use the important words of the relevant post.
To adjust contrast means to make the image brighter or darker. The
only way to do that is to make the dyes thinner. This lets more light
reflect off the paper. But as a dye gets, say, thinner it removes less
of its anti-color until it finally disappears and no anti-color is
removed. And the other way around if the dye gets thicker. So the
scale doesn´t go from, say, a dark magenta to a light magenta but from
dark magenta to white. Or from a saturated magenta to an unsaturated
magenta.
The digital process can compensate for this unwanted increase or
decrease in saturation if contrast is adjusted in the luminosity
channel of lab-mode. In this case neither hue nor saturation is beeing
changed. There is a nice little example of that on
http://www.cambridgeincolour.com/tutorials/photoshop-curves.htm. But
we can´t do the same in analog color printing.
It could well be that this is complete garbage as far as the
subtractive mixing of the analog process is concerned and if so I´d be
happy if someone tells me so that I can get this idea out of my head
and can think in another direction.
Best regards!
Monica Schulz