I have been working on making some 16x20in b&w prints and am not happy with the results. The blacks seem a bit muddy, and the paper base doesn't seem as white as it should be (maybe a bit warm/yellowy).
I am using Oriental Professional paper that has been sitting around for 8-10 years or so, but it is not fogged. The developer is Arista "Aristadol" which I assume is a Dektol substitute. Also quite old, but it was a powder developer in a sealed pack. I could mix a paper developer from scratch if necessary but I wonder if the developer is the issue. I could also increase the strength of the Aristadol to 1:1 instead of 1:2 if anyone thinks that would help.
Some of my images were a bit underexposed and overdeveloped - would that contribute to the muddiness of the image?
I confess it has been some time since I have attempted excellence in b&w printing. Using old stuff is probably not a way to start, but I think there is more going on, aka my lack of recent experience; it's a lot harder than I thought! I really want deep blacks and white whites and this experience reminds me how much more skill the analog world demands than sitting in front of a computer!
By the way, the negatives are on Polypan F (35mm) and Ultrafine Plus 100 (aka Fomapan 100 I think) and in each case they have very good contrast and depth. Also, I have some Sprint Systems optical brightener that I could use to whiten up the whites if anyone thinks maybe the paper base could have yellowed a bit.
I am using Oriental Professional paper that has been sitting around for 8-10 years or so, but it is not fogged. The developer is Arista "Aristadol" which I assume is a Dektol substitute. Also quite old, but it was a powder developer in a sealed pack. I could mix a paper developer from scratch if necessary but I wonder if the developer is the issue. I could also increase the strength of the Aristadol to 1:1 instead of 1:2 if anyone thinks that would help.
Some of my images were a bit underexposed and overdeveloped - would that contribute to the muddiness of the image?
I confess it has been some time since I have attempted excellence in b&w printing. Using old stuff is probably not a way to start, but I think there is more going on, aka my lack of recent experience; it's a lot harder than I thought! I really want deep blacks and white whites and this experience reminds me how much more skill the analog world demands than sitting in front of a computer!
By the way, the negatives are on Polypan F (35mm) and Ultrafine Plus 100 (aka Fomapan 100 I think) and in each case they have very good contrast and depth. Also, I have some Sprint Systems optical brightener that I could use to whiten up the whites if anyone thinks maybe the paper base could have yellowed a bit.

