DanielStone
Member
hey all,
just finished watching this powerful doc. about photographer James Nachtwey. very powerful!!!! Highly recommended to watch, be aware though, its a 10 part series on u-toob.
on to my main question:
in this videohttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u7u_y-__62w&feature=related
the lab guy printing is making a very large print. Seeing that Nachtwey's primary format is Tri-x 400 in 35mm, making a print this large would accentuate grain, maybe too excessively. Hard to tell though due to the low quality of the video though...
so for printing a print this large, would enlarged negatives be made before printing, or would the enlargement be made directly from the 35mm negative itself? I'm just thinking of maintaining the most fine detail in the final print as possible.
I don't print large, even though I shoot 4x5, and starting with 8x10(right now contact printing is the only thing I can do), but it peaked my curiosity enough to warrant starting a discussion on it.
thanks
-Dan
just finished watching this powerful doc. about photographer James Nachtwey. very powerful!!!! Highly recommended to watch, be aware though, its a 10 part series on u-toob.
on to my main question:
in this videohttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u7u_y-__62w&feature=related
the lab guy printing is making a very large print. Seeing that Nachtwey's primary format is Tri-x 400 in 35mm, making a print this large would accentuate grain, maybe too excessively. Hard to tell though due to the low quality of the video though...
so for printing a print this large, would enlarged negatives be made before printing, or would the enlargement be made directly from the 35mm negative itself? I'm just thinking of maintaining the most fine detail in the final print as possible.
I don't print large, even though I shoot 4x5, and starting with 8x10(right now contact printing is the only thing I can do), but it peaked my curiosity enough to warrant starting a discussion on it.
thanks
-Dan