vdonovan
Member
Hi folks, this is one of those questions that doesn't really have an answer, but I'd love to hear other opinions and experiences.
I have been shooting and printing B&W portraits lately and I find I'm not happy with the skin tones I'm getting. They seem to be either washed out or too grey. If I bump up the contrast, they look washed out. If I drop the contrast they look grey.
When I look at a test strip, I can pick the right exposures for the clothes and backdrop but the skin just never seems to look right.
For the record, I'm shooting Tri-X at EI 200, processed in Xtol 1:2. I'm printing on Ilford MGIV RC.
Any tips, guidelines, experiences on printing a good portrait skin tone?
I have been shooting and printing B&W portraits lately and I find I'm not happy with the skin tones I'm getting. They seem to be either washed out or too grey. If I bump up the contrast, they look washed out. If I drop the contrast they look grey.
When I look at a test strip, I can pick the right exposures for the clothes and backdrop but the skin just never seems to look right.
For the record, I'm shooting Tri-X at EI 200, processed in Xtol 1:2. I'm printing on Ilford MGIV RC.
Any tips, guidelines, experiences on printing a good portrait skin tone?