Mainecoonmaniac
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After reading the article, scroll down and read the comments until you get to the one by Andy Umbo. He basically says that in his experience, that level of manipulation in those prints would be wishful thinking, and that most likely none of them received anything like what the markings indicate. Unlike him, I make no claim to being an expert printer, but just based on my admitedly limited experience with dodging and burning, it does seem to be a bit of a stretch, that so many changes would be necessary to achieve the final result, or that the result of so many changes could be so seemless. In fact to me, some of the changes seem almost random, with two identical adjacent regions being given different times, with no discernable difference apparent in the final print.
I'd be curious to hear opinions from some APUG printers.
Regards,
Dave
I have been printing for a living since 1976 , those notes are a joke and completely useless and very misleading to young printers.
Basically turning a simple process into a complete useless diagram that nobody in their right mind would follow. It is very misleading and complete useless info.
I suggest that one should , look at the neg, look at the easel , and look at the print as it emerges in the developer, by observing one will make better prints.
We can disagree , I saw you post as an diss on simple printmaking that I enjoy doing.
Making prints is also another form of expression. We have different philosophies on how to approach it. There are no right and wrongs here. As Adams says "The negative is the score, and the print is the performance." How you interpret the score is up to you.
How about the image is the music and the capture is what you hear.
What's the print, then? The recording?![]()
I suppose that much dodging and burning is possible, if your job is to spend all week perfecting one photograph.
I agree with all above, but thought I would let others comment first. It makes him look skilful though.
My point is that I think it's practically a given that a "Lottery Winner" will require complex dodging and burning. I think the drawings are real.
I've never been able to duplicate a print from notes I've made of past printing. If I'm reprinting an image I may as well start from scratch using proven elevation and f- Stop but base exposure, burn and dodging simply don't hold up over time.
You're agreeing with this guy??? Yikes. I'm gonna have to get Dinesh in here to clean up this mess.
Since I have a fluorescent light source that has no regulator, I've not been able to duplicate one print next to the following one.
Bill, I worked with a similar primitive setup and was eventually able to establish good repeatability. I posted about it back in 2007, I believe. Did you ever see that? The workaround was to only start a printing sequence or test strip when the lamphouse was at 40C. The second point was to not alter the sequential order of dodging and burning steps.
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