bvy
Member
I don't know about Rudman, but I discovered this method on my own, out of necessity. Laying the mask on the paper produced a hard edge. Holding the mask close to the paper produced a halo (or bad registration). Finally I positioned the mask precisely and attached it to the easel board (just off the paper's edge) with tape. The tape acted as a hinge such that I could l raise and lower the mask and have it land in more or less the exact same spot on the paper each time. By lifting and dropping the mask and exposing multiple times as described, I got an edge much but a much softer one -- nothing I could have achieved by hand-holding the mask (but maybe you have steadier hands).This sounds like the exact equivalent of making a single exposure while slightly moving the mask, isn't it? I don't quite get the point: what it the advantage of making ten 1s exposures over one 10s exposure with a moving mask? How would it help avoiding the halo?