NedL
Subscriber
This is probably a silly question.
I use an old Beseler 23c with a cold light. The focus does not slip and I rarely need to re-focus when working on a single negative, even if I make test strips and several prints over a long time, like an hour.
This past week I made a bunch of quick 5x7 prints from a roll of 35mm film. Each print was "full frame", fit the same way on the 5x7 paper: I did not change the enlarger height.
So... as I was printing, even from one day to the next, each time I put a new negative in the carrier it appeared to already be in focus. I always refocus, but I started to wonder if it was really necessary, and a couple times I wasn't sure I ended up critically better than where it started. For me, it seems like I can't be sure it is perfectly in focus until I've seen it ever so slightly out of focus in each direction. But now I'm wondering if I should trust my eyes more and if it looks sharp at the start not fuss with it.
As I mentioned, it seemed to me there were a couple times where that last teeny tiny nudge might not have gotten it quite as perfect as it was before I refocused. It makes me think if I've hit "critically sharp" once, it might be better to leave it alone for the next frame, unless it obviously needs to be focused again.
So... do you always refocus for each new frame, or do you sometimes leave it be??
I use an old Beseler 23c with a cold light. The focus does not slip and I rarely need to re-focus when working on a single negative, even if I make test strips and several prints over a long time, like an hour.
This past week I made a bunch of quick 5x7 prints from a roll of 35mm film. Each print was "full frame", fit the same way on the 5x7 paper: I did not change the enlarger height.
So... as I was printing, even from one day to the next, each time I put a new negative in the carrier it appeared to already be in focus. I always refocus, but I started to wonder if it was really necessary, and a couple times I wasn't sure I ended up critically better than where it started. For me, it seems like I can't be sure it is perfectly in focus until I've seen it ever so slightly out of focus in each direction. But now I'm wondering if I should trust my eyes more and if it looks sharp at the start not fuss with it.
As I mentioned, it seemed to me there were a couple times where that last teeny tiny nudge might not have gotten it quite as perfect as it was before I refocused. It makes me think if I've hit "critically sharp" once, it might be better to leave it alone for the next frame, unless it obviously needs to be focused again.
So... do you always refocus for each new frame, or do you sometimes leave it be??