titrisol said:wha about post-flashing?
I used to do the same when I was making a couple of thousand custom B&W prints a month from sometimes awful negs. I used a double thickness of spaced milky plex (the pre-exposure with filtration device in the A. Adams books), and gave about 20% of the print exposure with negative in place and f-stop the same as the print. My experience would suggest that you just need to find a percentage time of the main exposure that works for your particular diffuser and go with that.Julian Ferreira said:I find the technique of flashing very easy and useful... I have a piece of frosted plastic (with no pattern) that I hold under the enlarger lens after my exposure. I leave my negative in, and my aperture the same as the print ... start with a flashing exposure of about 10% of my original exposure.
127 said:I've been meaning to try flashing for a while (since I got the second enlarger), but I guess this thread was in my head tonight, cause I finally got round to tryingit. I had a portrait shot against a great sky, but the skin tones were buried way too dark.
Rather than aiming for good blacks and whites, I worked the print to get the blacks and mid-tones where I wanted, ignoring the highlights which rapadly became burnt out, as I brought the mid tones up.
I then put a bit of milk carton in the negative carrier of the spare enlarger, racked it up to full hight, and ran a test strip which gave me the timeI coudl flash without effecting the paper visibly.
I then flashed the paper, and repeated the previous exposure - absolutly on cue, all the highlight detail came back!
I guess I could have tried to burn in the sky, but even for a first attempt at the technique, this was probably faster, and certainly easier (and more repeatable). It's pretty much foolproof, as once you've got the correct flash time for the paper it's virtually impossible to get a blown highlight.
Definatly be using this trick again.
Ian
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