Bill Burk
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Attached to this posting are three graphs which compare exposure vs. resolution for POTA and D-19....
If the very sharp peak in resolution versus exposure for D-19 is typical of regular films and developers (in a very general sense)... Then it means there is very little to no exposure "latitude" if you are seeking highest resolution.
And it could drive you crazy trying to evaluate it, but even the correct exposure... where you achieve this peak resolution... would only be correct for a very limited part of the subject - the part of the subject that is in the correct light and has the right contrast.
That's where microfilm copying of documents like newspapers and magazines is probably the best kind of subject (where you can adjust the exposure and processing with some trials) to try to achieve the pinnacle of resolution, lock it down and get some work done with it.
In an everyday photograph, you may have a lot more trouble hitting the highest peaks of resolution deliberately... But you might hit it accidentally in some parts of some photographs.
I was hoping for that in my pictures of Oak and Mistletoe, Black Diamond Mines. It would have been great if the leaves of the mistletoe bunches was clearly visible on the print... So it would have been great to have focused on the bunches and selected an exposure that would place the average of the bunches at the peak of the "exposure vs resolution" graphs. (I don't think I even achieved 10lp/mm in those shots. So I will have to re-do that).