Jim Rice
Member
Yes but whatever it takes to achieve that quality print is, I would think, pertinent.
Michael, I think you're right of course, but this thread has been useful for me in other ways. I was wondering what the "black dots" on Bill's timer were like, and then he posted a picture. I think of my exposures in terms of percentages like Doremus, but I don't have a systematic approach like his. My test strips are 2 second intervals then 3, then sometimes 4; not based on any theory but just on how wide they should be based on my experience. ...
For dodging and burning, I tend to think in terms of percent of base exposure. It's interesting for me to learn how other people think about it. ...
Ha! I let the timer do the business in the DR, so I go with what that says...
but... The volume of the car radio... That HAS to be an even number (or a multiple of 5)
Sign me up to the OCD club Clive!![]()
Wow, I've never met anyone else who had the car radio volume problem.
Ned,
Making a percentage test strip is easy. I like a 20% difference for my initial strip. I start with 10 seconds then cover a bit of the strip and count 20%, i.e., 2 seconds. The next strip should be 20% of 12 seconds, but that's close enough to 2 seconds, so I just give 2 seconds to the next bit of the strip. Now I have 14 seconds; 20% of that is really close to 3 seconds, so that's what I give the next bit. Now I have 17 seconds; 20% of that is rounded to 3 seconds as well so that's what the next bit gets. Now I have 20 seconds; 20% = 4 seconds here, so the next bit gets 4 seconds for a total of 24 seconds. The next strip will get 5 seconds to make 29 seconds, then the next gets 6 seconds to make 35 seconds total and finally, 7 seconds to make 42 seconds total.
Seems complicated, but once you figure it out you just count (with the metronome keeping seconds for you): 10 - 2 - 2 - 3 - 3 - 4 - 5 - 6 - 7 - off; easy and close enough to 20% so that the longer exposures have adequate separation - and you have a range of 10 - 42 seconds to choose from.
I think of all my dodging an burning in percentages also, and notate them as such in my exposure records. This is very helpful when scaling a print up or down. One simply finds the correct base exposure and then calculates the dodging and burning using the percentage of the base exposure. Of course, this is only a starting point, since different size prints almost always need some adjustments in this regard, but it is a very close starting point.
Best,
Doremus
Wow, I've never met anyone else who had the car radio volume problem.
10-2-2-2-2-2-3-3-3-3... for low contrast, the change from 2 to 3 seconds at about 20.
then 2-1-1-1-1-1... for high contrast.
It seems as if many of you have a lot of time on your hands (maybe too much...) when in the darkroom. Who really needs to worry about avoiding particular exposure times, or spend time multiplying and dividing by fractions of an f-stop?
For me it's whole stops on the lens, exposure times that allow me adequate accuracy (how the heck do you expect fractions of a second to be accurate with any timer?), and time for dodging. I prefer times in the 20-40 second range.
And, I alter exposure by percentages (and I make my test strips in percentages as well, rounded to the nearest full second), not fractions of f-stops, which seem overly unwieldy in the darkroom to me.
That and a metronome and I'm in business. I like simple and low-tech.
Best,
Doremus
I keep a two-column table of these numbers on the wall next to the enlarger for quick reference. The first column is the exposure addition needed and the second column is the resultant cumulative exposure. That makes it extremely easy to generate or interpret a sequence of test exposures.
With such massive spreads of time needed in test-strips I can't help thinking that something must be wrong? The first work-print is by eye, from the neg and contact-print, and is easily within half a stop of the eventual base exposure. I mean most negs are more-or-less the same (within each film-type or format) as those one has printed before, and the paper works the same today as yesterday, so why feel the need to work as though you had never been in a darkroom before? What am I missing?
I'd usually use half a sheet, for example, 'straight' at the estimated time then maybe a few test sections to check details with too-much or too-little contrast/exposure before having a go at the print. It just seemed to me that people were describing starting off with completely new and unknown materials, while mostly that isn't the case?
I have to agree , with all the talk on this site about how great metering is being done, understanding of film density and placement, It should be one test full sheet and move forward at an established fstop and time setting.
I think test strips with massive density swings is a waste of time and I would rather look at the print emerging in the developer to determine my next move.
Bob:
I find I do a lot more test-strip prints when I've been away from the darkroom for a while then when I am printing regularly.
And I do more test-strip prints when I am switching back and forth between films and formats, enlarging lenses and print sizes, then when I'm doing several prints from a single format and film, on to similar sized prints.
I would hazard a guess that the amount of time you spend printing might have an effect on your test-strip print usage![]()
I have said this before and will say this again, printmaking should be fun and using a KISS method is better than any of the other methods I hear many pontificate here about. Reading their posts make me wonder how in the hell do they make images that are striking . I suspect the work is so boring , boring boring. This complexity is not needed in a darkroom to make good prints. Just a good eye and love for the process.
MartinP said:With such massive spreads of time needed in test-strips I can't help thinking that something must be wrong? The first work-print is by eye, from the neg and contact-print, and is easily within half a stop of the eventual base exposure. I mean most negs are more-or-less the same (within each film-type or format) as those one has printed before, and the paper works the same today as yesterday, so why feel the need to work as though you had never been in a darkroom before? What am I missing?
I have to agree ...I think test strips with massive density swings is a waste of time and I would rather look at the print emerging in the developer to determine my next move.
I'll defend my lengthy description and method by saying I'm a teacher and try to explain things so that others gain an understanding of a concept.
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