Having in my possession some 1970s-era printed photographs, as well as the invaluable Printalyzer Densitometer, I decided to find once and for all an objective correlate to my subjective impression that the old stuff doesn't look like the new one.
I found at least one solid fact: the DMax of papers back in the day was nothing like today's. My 1970s print on Kodak Polycontrast has a DMax at best of 1.75, whereas today I can print up to 2.13 on Ilford MG FB.
That's quite a marked difference, in that such a shorter curve doesn't give the same separation of tones than today's longer ones. I know other factors matter, like the slope of the curve as influenced by development, and the total tonal quadrant between 1970s lenses+films+papers.
Still, if I look at paper densities like pots of paint going from white to black, it means that the old stuff did not have the darkest ink we can use today.
I found at least one solid fact: the DMax of papers back in the day was nothing like today's. My 1970s print on Kodak Polycontrast has a DMax at best of 1.75, whereas today I can print up to 2.13 on Ilford MG FB.
That's quite a marked difference, in that such a shorter curve doesn't give the same separation of tones than today's longer ones. I know other factors matter, like the slope of the curve as influenced by development, and the total tonal quadrant between 1970s lenses+films+papers.
Still, if I look at paper densities like pots of paint going from white to black, it means that the old stuff did not have the darkest ink we can use today.