Right, Ian. It is an entirely intentional choice.
Actually two things: I’m an engineer and thus I am methodically expanding my knowledge and experience — I’m sure you can appreciate this approach. I am starting to explore faster emulsion and sensitization (it’s not hard at all, really), but I find my tine limited by the demands of my day job and coating plates...which is great of course.
Much more importantly, I am filling a hole in photographic processes by offering plates that work and look exactly like the early dry plate days when the technology was being driven primarily by amateurs. That characteristic look was left behind as emulsion technology was commercialized and refined according to the demands of the market. Even Wall lamented the stifling impact of commercial competition to the sharing of research into emulsion development.
Personally, I wouldn’t want to shoot modern emulsion coated on plates. Film is much more convenient. But conversely..we don’t shoot analog for the sake of convenience, do we?
