albada
Subscriber
Split-grade burning works well! I used it on the sidewalk on the lower-right side of the left photo below (this is a photo of two 4x5 prints). I burned 00 (green), and got some texture that would have blocked white as you see in concrete elsewhere in the photo.
I like the result because there is minimal haloing around my burn. But burning all those little spots of concrete was impractical, so I tried flashing with paper with blue to its threshold, resulting in the right photo above. I also boosted grade from 2 to 3 because flashing reduces contrast.
My goal is to burn and dodge without resorting to heroics like making pin-aligned masks. Here are two rules I discovered:
1. Flashing is useful only when it's okay for light tones to have low contrast. That's because flashing results in an upswept curve.
2. If a straight print looks okay around grade 2, then when you add a separate flash, the main exposure should have its green-time cut in half. That will add one grade and yield nearly the correct exposure.
Does everyone already know these things? I've had an enlarger for around two years now, so I'm confident with normal printing, but these other techniques are still new to me.
Here's another comparison of a grade 2 straight print (left) and a grade 3 flash (right):
Motion blur ruined this shot, but it helped me learn about flashing. The flash on the right shows detail in the canopies over the cars, which blocked to paper-white on the left. Also, the trees in the top-background look soft and billowy with flash, and harsh without.
I like the result because there is minimal haloing around my burn. But burning all those little spots of concrete was impractical, so I tried flashing with paper with blue to its threshold, resulting in the right photo above. I also boosted grade from 2 to 3 because flashing reduces contrast.
My goal is to burn and dodge without resorting to heroics like making pin-aligned masks. Here are two rules I discovered:
1. Flashing is useful only when it's okay for light tones to have low contrast. That's because flashing results in an upswept curve.
2. If a straight print looks okay around grade 2, then when you add a separate flash, the main exposure should have its green-time cut in half. That will add one grade and yield nearly the correct exposure.
Does everyone already know these things? I've had an enlarger for around two years now, so I'm confident with normal printing, but these other techniques are still new to me.
Here's another comparison of a grade 2 straight print (left) and a grade 3 flash (right):
Motion blur ruined this shot, but it helped me learn about flashing. The flash on the right shows detail in the canopies over the cars, which blocked to paper-white on the left. Also, the trees in the top-background look soft and billowy with flash, and harsh without.