tballphoto
Member
Is there an actual method to the madness of figuring out a contrast grade for a paper like ilford multigrade 4 rc deluxe or any other one?
I have negatives that were somewhat darker, but when shot at 2 came out ok, others that were same darkness or slight darker, came out as solid black or "only faint bits of portions that were silver or solid white in the negative" when done at 3 or 4.
on those slightly darker/just darker, i have to actual take my time to see the image on the negative strip when held up, but on the ones that printed ok, i could see a "photo" when looking at them in plain light.
is it better to aim for a film negative with LESS huge swings between black and white? or is it choosing a lower contrast number for darker negatives
I have negatives that were somewhat darker, but when shot at 2 came out ok, others that were same darkness or slight darker, came out as solid black or "only faint bits of portions that were silver or solid white in the negative" when done at 3 or 4.
on those slightly darker/just darker, i have to actual take my time to see the image on the negative strip when held up, but on the ones that printed ok, i could see a "photo" when looking at them in plain light.
is it better to aim for a film negative with LESS huge swings between black and white? or is it choosing a lower contrast number for darker negatives