cliveh
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- Joined
- Oct 9, 2010
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- 35mm RF
Many years ago when I was studying photography at college we once had a visiting lecturer who spoke about relative tones in printing. In a blacked out lecture theatre he stood at a podium onto which was projected a white projector light and he held out a table tennis bat painted white and asked us what colour we see. We said white. He then proceeded to hold out 6 or 7 more bats, asking the same question which showed a progressively brighter white, which eventually made the first bat look grey. The message that Im sure you expert printers out there already appreciate, is that of relative values. I subsequently found it useful to have 2 sheets of printing paper pinned to the wall just outside my student darkroom. One of which was completely fogged and completely developed and one taken straight out the box and fixed. Thus giving a reference point in ambient light of a complete black and white with the printing paper we were using.
Can others recall a particular lecture or lesson learned in the past they never forgot?
Can others recall a particular lecture or lesson learned in the past they never forgot?