Photo Engineer
Subscriber
Both graded. Sorry, I forgot that. In fact, most graded papers today are both blue and green sensitive.
PE
PE
The article in Photographic Techniques that I have referred to before, by Dickinson and Zawadski, shows that manny VC papers have such poor VC characteristics that they are not of professional quality for many print contrasts. They show curves of several products but do not name them. I believe that only two papers in their test procedure passed and would get what I would call a high quality mark.
VC papers are not easy to build. I think that Kodak, Fuji and Ilford had/have the best going.
PE
And, of course, Ctein's book "Post Exposure" has a very complete treatment of this subject with photographs and figures.
'Variable-Contrast Papers by Dick Dickerson and Silvia Zawadzki. The history and science behind papers, how to evaluate printing papers. Vol. 26, No. 2, page 18, year 2005.'
Is this the article?
Tom.
2. ID-14 developer at full strength would appear to give higher contrast, even to the Kentmere paper, but paper choice made a more significant difference. ID-14 developer may give more flexibility printing low contrast negatives on the ILFORD paper as the filtration settings on the enlarger can be lower.
Back to the original subject, most references say that you can
not get much of an increase in contrast in the print by simply
changing the developer; maybe a grade, if you're very lucky.
The single grade papers are usually the most adaptable ... .
There are several high contrast print developers listed for those
who mix there own. Agfa 108, Edwal 120, Gevaert GD-4, D-171,
and the high contrast mixes for D-64 and Beers come to mind.
Undiluted D-19b is sometimes recommended, and undiluted
Dektol would probably show an effect. PE's suggestion on
raising the pH is certainly an easy way to go with
premixed developers.
Tom did you make any comparisons with Dokumol? I would be very interested in the results.
Most condenser enlargers use a diffuse bulb and so offer very little increase in contrast compared to a colour head.
Ian
Gary,
I didn't make any comparisons with Dokumol. However, Tetenal do seem to market Dokumol as a high contrast and cold tone developer but I've not used it; and the tone may well depend on the type of emulsion. ID-14 with the ILFORD MGIVFB GLOSS paper produced a neutral tone.
Tom.
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