Please take the digital lessons to
hybrid photo or pm's or some such thing, it's off topic here.
No cigar, it's of relevance to the OP so it's not off-topic, and anyone who google's and finds this thread, there is nothing worse tha finally finding relevant info something only to find the issues never answered or resolved.
It was a small mention, I'm not going to self-censor and omit information, if it's offensive to your eyes than skip my posts
My point was that B&W papers are are available in grades and VC, that option isn't really available with color unless you don't care about color balance. :rolleyes:
So, I guess my question is "how might you suggest that we deviate from standard and get a reasonable result?"
There are plenty of ways to correct colour in colour printing, you could do something fancy such as send the enlarger light through a pair of dichroic beam splitters (dichroic prism), have a function of reducing these separate light intensities and recombine them.
Filter the backlight.
Build your own backlight out of red, green and blue LEDs that are dimmable with pulse-width modulation circuits to be able to dial in colour.
When I develop C-41 in Rodinal, and fix, bleach and re-develop in E-6 colour developer, bleach, fix, etc, only green-mask compensation is needed, using C-41 then gives orange mask negs as normal.
There is also the ability to dilute C-41 and process for longer, which has been explored lightly on flickr and gives varying results.
I've also been experimenting with making a highly dilutable (1+100) 20 degrees celsius colour negative developer, that works in stand and semi-stand for an hour at 1+100.
I've had varying degrees of sucess:
(top film, bottom digital reference)
Trying to get the right negative contrast at 20 c is something I'm still working on, in fact it needs a lot of work.
In short, its up to your own ingeniuity to come up with solutions to problems, instead of just accepting the status quo, if we all did that, humanity would never have made any progress.
And yes I probably should buy a full colour chart, but this does the job for what I need for the time being.