The bottom line is this. Edge effects are not good edge effects unless they do what is shown in the above post. Otherwise, the results will vary with magnification, leading to poor results, or what one wag described as "an optical delusion".
PE
Ron,
Would the following statement be correct?
If the amount of micro-contrast is optimum for a contact print when the width of the edge effects is 40µ, the width of the edge effects would need to be reduced to 2.5µ with a 4X magnification to obtain the same micro-contrast.
Sandy
One thing I don't often see acknowledged on the web is the near uselessness of showing pictures to illustrate some point. Someone will say, "look at the tonal separation on this picture" or "look at how great this film performed" and yet converting a picture to a digital file sucks a good part of the information out of it. Sharpness is reduced to the resolution of a computer monitor and tones are translated into 256 steps. Even the scanner does an interpolation to arrive at what it calls pixels.