larfe
Member
- Joined
- Jul 21, 2015
- Messages
- 154
- Format
- 35mm
Hello,
in this video of Tim Rudman making a print in his darkroom:
he is filmed while dodging a long narrow strip at the bottom of his print with a small dodge tool going back and forth during the exposure.
While it is not the first time I see a printer doing it this way, it does strike me as a rather 'hit and miss' technique since it is effectively not possible to calculate exactly how much a particular area will be dodged for i.e. the exact opposite of f-stop printing.
I've also seen printers burning through a little tiny hole in a not so dissimilar (guesstimate?) manner...
This in fact probably explains why he brightens this particular area later with bleach, but I just wanted to find out from others if I was missing something here?
Thanks in advance.
in this video of Tim Rudman making a print in his darkroom:
he is filmed while dodging a long narrow strip at the bottom of his print with a small dodge tool going back and forth during the exposure.
While it is not the first time I see a printer doing it this way, it does strike me as a rather 'hit and miss' technique since it is effectively not possible to calculate exactly how much a particular area will be dodged for i.e. the exact opposite of f-stop printing.
I've also seen printers burning through a little tiny hole in a not so dissimilar (guesstimate?) manner...
This in fact probably explains why he brightens this particular area later with bleach, but I just wanted to find out from others if I was missing something here?
Thanks in advance.