tkamiya
Member
I agree, jeffreyg, not all masterful prints has to glow. But my curiosity started when photographs that I like has this brilliance that almost appear back-lit when I fully know B&W photograph is a reflective medium. It seemed to do something that is physically impossible (to glow).
I'm happy to report, I've been in e-mail conversation with someone from APUG. Through his help and from this thread and my newly acquired "Way Beyond" book, I was able to achieve some glow/pop/sparkle in my print. What it took was to carefully control contrast and print density and do so in smaller areas. That is - not to treat a page of print as whole and apply one exposure and contrast to overall print then fix some, but mask/cover/dodge/burn in smaller sections and assemble the whole print. It was one heck of a busy printing session! (I used masking and split grade printing combined with manual tool dodging) My result is FAR from masterful art but it is much better than my straight print.
Thanks all!
I'm happy to report, I've been in e-mail conversation with someone from APUG. Through his help and from this thread and my newly acquired "Way Beyond" book, I was able to achieve some glow/pop/sparkle in my print. What it took was to carefully control contrast and print density and do so in smaller areas. That is - not to treat a page of print as whole and apply one exposure and contrast to overall print then fix some, but mask/cover/dodge/burn in smaller sections and assemble the whole print. It was one heck of a busy printing session! (I used masking and split grade printing combined with manual tool dodging) My result is FAR from masterful art but it is much better than my straight print.
Thanks all!