Sorry for the late answer, MEB.
The contrast reduction mask is an unsharp and low contrast black and white positive put on top of the color negative. It gives more expoure to lights than to shadows, so you get an automatic burn of lights and dodge of shadows. The intensity is controlled by the contrast of the positive and the ammount of unsharpness is to produce a smooth gradient between different densities.
Do a digital contrast reduction mask is very simple. Scan normally in color to positive, this eliminate automatically the orange mask and eliminate dust via ICE, and then convert to B/W, unsharp and reduce the contrast in the editing software of your choice. In my case I did it with Vuescan 9.6 and PS 6.0. Scan was done to 2000 dpi, conversion to B/W with "Desaturate" option, unsharpness was done with a "Gaussian Blur" effect of around 27 pixels, and the reduction of contrast by displacing the black point vertically in a "Curves" mask.
The contrast reduction mask is an unsharp and low contrast black and white positive put on top of the color negative. It gives more expoure to lights than to shadows, so you get an automatic burn of lights and dodge of shadows. The intensity is controlled by the contrast of the positive and the ammount of unsharpness is to produce a smooth gradient between different densities.
Do a digital contrast reduction mask is very simple. Scan normally in color to positive, this eliminate automatically the orange mask and eliminate dust via ICE, and then convert to B/W, unsharp and reduce the contrast in the editing software of your choice. In my case I did it with Vuescan 9.6 and PS 6.0. Scan was done to 2000 dpi, conversion to B/W with "Desaturate" option, unsharpness was done with a "Gaussian Blur" effect of around 27 pixels, and the reduction of contrast by displacing the black point vertically in a "Curves" mask.