The above by Ian is correct. Often, silver rich emulsions were an artifact of incomplete sensitization of the grains which then required more silver halide to be coated to reach a given contrast or Dmax. If you look at a cross section of developed film or paper, you see that development is greatest at the top and least at the bottom due to attenuation of light and developer diffusion effects. The heavier the coating layer is, the more pronounced this becomes and it affects sharpness.
PE
PE, very nice to have access to someone who really knows what he is talking about. Thank you.
That said, you've mentioned a few things, like sharpness, dmax etc. I am more concerned with midtone separation. I print from large negs, 4x5 and 8x10, using a drum scanner (Aztek Premier, top of the line) and wide format printers. I have two, one is dedicated to b&w. I start with Cone inks, but reformulate them to my own target opacities. I have a great RIP, which allows me to control the curve of the paper exactly (and very smoothly). Back in the 70's I was a platinum printer and my images look more like platinum prints than anything else. I am very happy with the printing, they exceed what I did in platinum.
My negs, from the 70's and 80's print themselves. Yes, using the scanner, etc. The richness is wonderful, delicious, very 3-dimensional. My experiments with modern film have fallen short. I've done a lot of testing, every film and just about every developer, some I've come up with myself.
To try and explain this - I know that any film can reproduce a 21 step tablet, no problem. But what if this was had a 2100 step tablet? Let's imagine, for purposes of discussion only - as I have no idea how many steps great film can actually separate - that the older film (Tri-X, FP4 not plus) separated all 2100 steps. This would be evidenced by the scanner able to get a different numerical value for each step. What appears with modern film is that for example, steps 1522, 1523 and 1524 will return the same value. Tones in the print appear the same across values which really ought to separate out. Filters can help but that's a sledgehammer technique.... and has other consequences. (I'm not a big fan of dark skies.)
One could also suggest an 88 key piano where adjacent keys might be hitting the same string.
I have no worries about base, no worries about dmax... the midtones are not separating. I take this to be about the lack of silver, but maybe it isn't. Maybe its just the thin emulsion.
Do you know what this is caused by? Is there a way to address it? Am I nuts?
Thanks,
Lenny
EigerStudios.com
Scanning and Printing