Paul Howell said:...then my wife (former art director and journalist) peeks in and I start over.
billschwab said:Now everything is d******y "proofed" first. I tend to work the image in Pshop before it ever hits the wet darkroom. It gives me a resonable facimile of what I want the finished print to be and has cut-down immensely on wasted paper and chemistry.
Bill
True. The trouble is that I have never yet made a "perfect" negative. I am not yet convinced that such a thing exists.Curt said:The Black and White Handbook pg. 176 Negative "The easiest way to get a perfect print is to start out with a perfect negative".
Roger Hicks said:I've also started a new threat based on the idea of don't work prints.
pauldc said:What paper do people make their working prints on? Do you stick to the fibre paper your final print is intended to be on? Or do you do a series of prints on RC paper (which is far cheaper) to get a sense of the negative and then convert the times to a known fibre paper towards the end?
I am fairly new to printing (1.5 years experience) so was wondering what you more experienced printers do.
Using fibre paper for a series of work/did not work prints can be fairly expensive. But is this simply part of the territory of 'doing it properly'?
I think that you are correct. It will save paper, but some of us are so obsessed with "That Exhibition print that I want to use to display my `being'", that saving paper and time is not a major, or at times, even significant concern.mmcclellan said:... The main thing is to be methodical, in that you have a system and follow it closely to get to the best possible final image. Working methodically and intelligently will ultimately save paper, even if it seems like you're wasting it at the time. If I use 9 or 10 sheets of paper, but have four exhibition-quality prints at the end of the day, then it's all money and time well spent!
mmcclellan said:I would NEVER do "work prints" on anything but the paper I will use for the final print. You cannot really evaluate tonal relationships, depth of tone, dodging and burning, etc., without looking at the "real" paper the finished prints will be on.
I do make prints on RC then move on to FB, but as I though about the the topic, I would have to call these RC prints just really big proofs, just what I have. But even when work with working prints, as I stated earlier, I may do several prints on several differnt papers until I find the surface and tone that I want.
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