Why don't I practice it? Good question. The first answer is a dumb one -- in my youth I could never afford the equipment. I simply didn't have the money to equip a 4x5 outfit and darkroom, let alone an 8x10 one or larger. I did the best I could with limited means. For 30 years I used a great -- little -- used Arca Swiss monorail 6x9 camera and roll film. It was the perfect sweet spot for my tastes and my budget. I had three old lenses and several Graphic roll film holders. It had full view camera controls and with very modest enlargement I could make a very nice 5x7 or 8x10 print. These were as close to a contact print as I every got. I never did get an 8x10 enlargement that I would say would match the sheer quality of an 8x10 contact print, but I was happy with the results nonetheless.
In truth, I did try an 8x10 camera once. For about a week. I purchased a rickety old Burke & James 8x10 antique camera that had some Ektar something or other lens, a couple film holders, and a box of film. Quite simply, I hated using it. I came to the conclusion that I love looking at someone elses results, but large cameras are just a torture to use -- at least for me. I felt guilty about this for a long time. Then I realized the liberating truth that I don't play the clarinet either, but Benny Goodman is perfection. I also don't paint or draw, but I am spellbound by Japanese ukiyo-e woodblock prints. I decided it was okay to love gelatin silver contact prints -- even if I did so only as a consumer.
Now having said that, I did do one project -- which I never did finish -- called "40 at 40". It was a "concept project" of 40 images in celebration of my 40th birthday. The idea was to make a portfolio of 40 contact prints from my best 6x9 negatives. Small, little jewels, I hoped. I jumped in and did ten sets or so of the first 25 images. I really loved them. But, by the time I'd gotten that far in the darkroom project I was 42 and the idea kind of fizzled. I still have the prints in a box somewhere. I should dig them out again and see how they look today. If I were a betting man, I'd bet the look . . . well, small.
Brooks