Tom Stanworth
Member
- Joined
- Sep 4, 2003
- Messages
- 2,021
- Format
- Multi Format
OK. We all know what papers and films we like...which devs we like etc. I know that for reasons unknown I have always had better looking prints off Agfa MCC than Ilford MG. Almost always....just as I hate TMax100 most of the time but have on lovely print made on Seagul when almost everything else was dire from this film no matter what I did (and I am sure I did not have over developed or under developed negs!)
I have seen stunning prints off Ilford MG with all of the gradation that mine lack on the same paper and that I (used) to have to go to Agfa or Forte for.
I realise that both film and paper have curves and that how they mesh affects the print profoundly. However, I have used many devs and films and have never really explored why some produce a tonal scale I like on certain papers and others dont. I tend to move on after trial and error.
Are there generally acknowledged 'disaster' and 'generally successful' combinations out there? I know some get busy with densitometers and can explain these things scientifically, but I cannot go there. Maybe there are other reasons MGIV has never really worked that well for me!
I would presume that using Ilford stand bys such as FP4+, ID11/D76, Multigrade Dev and MGIV should be a good place to start, but maybe not? I presume Ilford match the curves of their products so they mesh well....maybe not?
There was a time when I could try any of 4 or 5 papers and use the one that 'looked best' with the given neg if my usual paper did not sem to work naturally, but with the dwindling options I am keen to be a little more precise in matching things if this is possible.
Tips, comments, insights? (other than learning densitometry and testing all film, dev, paper, paper dev combos!)
I have seen stunning prints off Ilford MG with all of the gradation that mine lack on the same paper and that I (used) to have to go to Agfa or Forte for.
I realise that both film and paper have curves and that how they mesh affects the print profoundly. However, I have used many devs and films and have never really explored why some produce a tonal scale I like on certain papers and others dont. I tend to move on after trial and error.
Are there generally acknowledged 'disaster' and 'generally successful' combinations out there? I know some get busy with densitometers and can explain these things scientifically, but I cannot go there. Maybe there are other reasons MGIV has never really worked that well for me!
I would presume that using Ilford stand bys such as FP4+, ID11/D76, Multigrade Dev and MGIV should be a good place to start, but maybe not? I presume Ilford match the curves of their products so they mesh well....maybe not?
There was a time when I could try any of 4 or 5 papers and use the one that 'looked best' with the given neg if my usual paper did not sem to work naturally, but with the dwindling options I am keen to be a little more precise in matching things if this is possible.
Tips, comments, insights? (other than learning densitometry and testing all film, dev, paper, paper dev combos!)