Thank you to those that have replied with helpful, useful and thoughtful responses. I truly appreciate those that share their knowledge! And to those that just like to pop off on others ... as we say here in Texas (where, yes my dear, we do have ice cubes) "Bless your heart". For those of us with manners, it's a nice way to say what we think of others that don't have them.
Back to my issue:
To clarify - in my sample image DISREGARD THE SKY. I am not concerned with the highest value of highlight. The highlight I AM interested in is the highest register in the SKIN TONE. While I have only been developing my own B&W film for a little over a year, I have shot (gasp, digitally) for a long time now. I know exactly how to manipulate an image digitally to get the tones I want. If you look at the histogram, what I want to do is spread the mid tones and get the most range there - with both highlight and deep shadow in the small range that is the skin tone - while keeping the remainder of the image as dark as possible. While I realize that this has A LOT to do with lighting, it also has to do with other things. In making my "conversion" in Lightroom, what I do is shift the slider for white balance to a BLUER hue, which generally FLATTENS out the contrast of the image (which is what a blue filter would do, right??) but brings the skintones to a level where they are overall darker and richer but with maximum lightness in the highlights. THEN - I adjust the contrast and exposure, so that I can manipulate the skin tones to where I want.
SO - I hope that I am not talking too much off limits here about PS, but I would like to apply THIS to what I'm shooting and developing in the darkroom (and subsequently wet printing as well).
All suggestions thus far have made total sense to me and seem to apply to what I have previously done (using a blue filter, reflectors, bluish open shade, overexposing and underdeveloping, etc...). I want to shift the tonal range to get maximum flexibility in the midtones.
I hope I am making sense...
Back to my issue:
To clarify - in my sample image DISREGARD THE SKY. I am not concerned with the highest value of highlight. The highlight I AM interested in is the highest register in the SKIN TONE. While I have only been developing my own B&W film for a little over a year, I have shot (gasp, digitally) for a long time now. I know exactly how to manipulate an image digitally to get the tones I want. If you look at the histogram, what I want to do is spread the mid tones and get the most range there - with both highlight and deep shadow in the small range that is the skin tone - while keeping the remainder of the image as dark as possible. While I realize that this has A LOT to do with lighting, it also has to do with other things. In making my "conversion" in Lightroom, what I do is shift the slider for white balance to a BLUER hue, which generally FLATTENS out the contrast of the image (which is what a blue filter would do, right??) but brings the skintones to a level where they are overall darker and richer but with maximum lightness in the highlights. THEN - I adjust the contrast and exposure, so that I can manipulate the skin tones to where I want.
SO - I hope that I am not talking too much off limits here about PS, but I would like to apply THIS to what I'm shooting and developing in the darkroom (and subsequently wet printing as well).
All suggestions thus far have made total sense to me and seem to apply to what I have previously done (using a blue filter, reflectors, bluish open shade, overexposing and underdeveloping, etc...). I want to shift the tonal range to get maximum flexibility in the midtones.
I hope I am making sense...

