Hello,
We all know that silver gelatin paper has a much shorter exposure scale than other printing processes. Therefore it needs negatives very low in contrast, much lower than other processes need.
Is this feature intentionally implemented? Are silver halide papers so contrasty for a reason? Or is it just an intrinsic property of silver halides?
Is this short exposure scale a good thing? I mean, if it were possible to create a silver halide paper with a very long exposure scale, let's call it grade #0000, which were able to match a negative developed for albumen paper, would this be a good thing? Or a bad thing? Or maybe it wouldn't matter from an image quality point of view?
Thank you.
We all know that silver gelatin paper has a much shorter exposure scale than other printing processes. Therefore it needs negatives very low in contrast, much lower than other processes need.
Is this feature intentionally implemented? Are silver halide papers so contrasty for a reason? Or is it just an intrinsic property of silver halides?
Is this short exposure scale a good thing? I mean, if it were possible to create a silver halide paper with a very long exposure scale, let's call it grade #0000, which were able to match a negative developed for albumen paper, would this be a good thing? Or a bad thing? Or maybe it wouldn't matter from an image quality point of view?
Thank you.
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