Dear All,
Bracketing is something I have always done, except for a brief period as a professional wedding photographer ( and even then I used two cameras and used one for the first half of the wedding and the other for the second half... ).
Its just that basically that as part of my journey to being a photographer I was a printer....( we had to go through every department to learn, it was an apprenticeship really ) as I have shared with you before I had to print up to 1,500 prints per week. We used ILFORD ILFOSPEED Graded paper and KODAK chemistry.... every time you had to shade and dodge it slowed you down, we had 6 photographers working full time, all types of photography studio / wedding / industrial / commercial / studio etc it was amazing but you quickly learnt whose neg's were best, and to have a choice ( bracketed ) was best of all, to be sure, if you do dodge and burn you can actually improve most prints but mostly it was a commercially acceptable print we had to do, with little waste rather than an aesthetically pleasing or perfect one !.
For my own 'proper' photography and in truth only for 'keeper' shots I go up a stop and down a stop from my estimation in half stops, so 5 exposures, and they go through the Refrema at work, I rarely need to D&B and I have spare negs I contact and choose the one that will print the best... its really very simple. I'm not saying its the correct thing to do..but it's what I do...
To my poster friend from Italy.... Tri-X is a great film always has been... but Man and Boy I have always been ILFORD, although my Grandfather who set me out on this passion over 40 years ago always said 'Kodak for film but ILFORD for paper'.... and I still have, and revere the Kodak Retinette he bought me. 6 years ago we had a family holiday to a few European capitals rather than the beach.... my daughter literally fell in Love with the new FIAT 500 that back then had not long been launched she saw for the first time on a Rome street.... and guess what...she drives a gun metal grey one now, she learnt on it, drives it, and just adores it.... the power of brand, fashion and not a little bit of style !. I like you prefer German......!!!!
As to the ILFORD Master Printer title... interesting thought, which I will think about.
Simon ILFORD photo / HARMAN technology Limited :