retina_restoration
Member
I find this discussion deeply depressing. It makes me question why I would want to engage other photographers at all.
I dodge or burn probably less than 5% of my prints. If you make the correct negative exposure and correct development of the negative for the type of enlarger you use to print, followed by the correct print exposure, without any contrast control, then it is rarely nessesary.
A few years ago, several people on APUG (as it then was) participated in an exchange where a few sets of negatives were made as identical duplicates, and then one of each was distributed amongst the participants. Each printer was tasked with making their own decisions about how to interpret the negative they received.
The definitive last word on the subject. I like it, though I am of the 'everything goes' bent myself.There are people who argue very strongly that cropping to make the final image shows weakness. Then there are people who say you shouldn't need to dodge and burn a lot. Or just burn and not dodge. Whatever. I don't think any of those people go far enough. Making a positive from the negative is altering the photograph. Just exhibit the negative.
I find this discussion deeply depressing.
There seems to be at least three different "discussions" going on at the same time in this thread. In barely two pages. Might be a new Photrio record.
I wonder whether Mr. Sanderson would have chosen to take the following photo of mine, or whether if he did, how he would have chosen to make the result "expressive"?
Roughly speaking, the unmanipulated image, without much realization of its potential:
View attachment 406333
The eventual printed result - or at least a decent facsimile of it:
Net Loft Floats #10
- MattKing
- 2
A detail from some of the nets and floats on display at the Net Loft building at the Brittania...
For the framed version of the print, I elected to flip it top to bottom.
In real life, the subject is actually spread on the floor.
Or just have slide shows...stay positive!There are people who argue very strongly that cropping to make the final image shows weakness. Then there are people who say you shouldn't need to dodge and burn a lot. Or just burn and not dodge. Whatever. I don't think any of those people go far enough. Making a positive from the negative is altering the photograph. Just exhibit the negative. The viewer should be able to interpret the transformation from negative to positive themselves. If they can't, obviously the original photograph is not strong enough.
Matt,
This is you who decide. No need to explain. You like it. It's like that. Period.
The statement I made was about the notion that print manipulations are a matter of 'necessity'. I think that's a problematic notion and that's what I intended to illustrate. I could have referred to any body of work, or no body of work at all, to make the same point and it wouldn't have made a difference. My statement was not an assessment of anybody's work. It was a response to a thought, and a thought I happened to disagree with.Koraks -- you are way out of line...I suggest getting your own panties untwisted first before posting. Your mention that you would someone else's prints differently is meaningless and as mentioned earlier -- ridiculous.
I dodge or burn probably less than 5% of my prints. If you make the correct negative exposure and correct development of the negative for the type of enlarger you use to print, followed by the correct print exposure, without any contrast control, then it is rarely nessesary.
Hello Mike,Not sure what "Student Quality paper" is nor who makes it Presumably Andrew has a specific paper or papers in mind but it would have been helpful to say what these are for the sake of those wishing to avoid such paper
pentaxuser
I believe that the author was just pointing out that if enough exposure was given for a maximum black for the clearest part of the negative, then the rest of the print just needs additional exposure rather than it being the actual way he exposes his darkroom prints.His examples were quite terrible, obvious with no subtle workmanship. So poor in fact I could not really read the article , but if he is saying dodging is not required but rather employ burning I would say he does not have a clue about printing. The dodging tool is IMO the weapon of mass destruction ( good) excessive burning a bad thing.
Basic premise of the blogger's argument is quite debatable. When he writes:
I understand that's what works for him — what constitutes "mood," contrary to what he seems to believe, is a very subjective matter — but you can't make it a universal rule.
Sometimes everything is lit, and that's when the good photo is. Contrary to the cliché, there's no rule that says you can't take photos between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. or even full noon — sometimes, that's when the good photo is —, and there's no rule that says light must "reveal" or "accentuate" something, or, to put it differently, that somethings must be hidden. Sometimes, the good photo is when all is seen, sometimes, the good photo is when you want your viewer to notice everything and you make that happen.
I'll add that it's totally fine if there is no black is a photo — if that weren't the case, 85% of Robert Adams' photographs would have to be thrown away. To tell people to "Look for the first appearance of black on the test strip and then check what the highlights look like at that exposure" is most absurd if everything in your photo goes from zone IV or V and up.
Thanks; on the basis of a quick peek, the print manipulations are more subtle and less intrusive in this series. The subject matter is different as well, of course, as are the compositional choices. Overall, much more compelling than the apparently unfortunately chosen examples on that specific blog entry.Maybe take a look at Andrew's portfolio "At Home" and get a better idea of what his work looks like.
I don't think Andrew's blog post is intended to be interpreted as "I'm telling you what to do".
You summed up my thoughts exactly. I'm beginning to regret posting the link to his blog now.I don't think Andrew's blog post is intended to be interpreted as "I'm telling you what to do". He's just sharing some ideas about how he approaches his darkroom work, and I quote:
"this article is about the ways that I use expressive printing to subdue or emphasize different areas of an image to make the picture more powerful." (emphasis mine)
I really don't get why so many people are interpreting Andrew's post as if he's dictating how a person must print their negatives in the darkroom. He's just offering suggestions for how someone who is seeking to improve their prints might add a new skill to their darkroom vocabulary. The pushback I'm hearing is mystifying. (But my experience informs me that this is not a very forgiving crowd)
Maybe take a look at Andrew's portfolio "At Home" and get a better idea of what his work looks like. His prints are not typically as heavy handed and obviously manipulated as the examples in his blog post — perhaps he simply wanted to make it really obvious what he was talking about and chose examples accordingly.
don't think Andrew's blog post is intended to be interpreted as "I'm telling you what to do". He's just sharing some ideas about how he approaches his darkroom work, and I quote:
"this article is about the ways that I use expressive printing to subdue or emphasize different areas of an image to make the picture more powerful." (emphasis mine)
I really don't get why so many people are interpreting Andrew's post as if he's dictating how a person must print their negatives in the darkroom. He's just offering suggestions for how someone who is seeking to improve their prints might add a new skill to their darkroom vocabulary. The pushback I'm hearing is mystifying. (But my experience informs me that this is not a very forgiving crowd)
I'm beginning to regret posting the link to his blog now.
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