Roger Hicks
Member
Don Cardwell coined the magnificent term 'didn't work prints', which prompted the following thought:
There is a choice between giving up when you cannot get a good print without using an inordinate amount of paper, or carrying on and on, as (for example) Ole describes with one of his more refractory negatives.
At what point do you decide that you are flogging a dead negative, and that you might do better to switch to something else? What is the largest number of work prints you have made before (a) getting the print you wanted or (b) giving up -- and which, a or b, do you do more often?
Cheers,
Roger (www.rogerandfrances.com)
There is a choice between giving up when you cannot get a good print without using an inordinate amount of paper, or carrying on and on, as (for example) Ole describes with one of his more refractory negatives.
At what point do you decide that you are flogging a dead negative, and that you might do better to switch to something else? What is the largest number of work prints you have made before (a) getting the print you wanted or (b) giving up -- and which, a or b, do you do more often?
Cheers,
Roger (www.rogerandfrances.com)
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