dkonigs
Subscriber
So I've just finished my first attempt at RA-4 darkroom printing, using a dichroic enlarger and Fuji Crystal Archive Super Type II paper (i.e. the only kind you can actually by in cut sheets). Overall, I'm quite pleased with the results. The main thing that concerns me is exposure times. This paper seems to be far more sensitive to light than the B&W paper I've used previously.
I was printing a 35mm negative with a 50mm enlarger lens. I had the lens stopped down to f/8 and had a 2-stop ND filter screwed onto it. My exposure times were still only in the 7-9 second range, and the image was dim enough that it was actually hard to make it out while exposing. Is this time range normal/okay? Should I crank it up to f/11 and/or add more ND to bump the time up? (And if I consider using cyan for that, how do I convert dichroic filter added ND into terms of "stops" so I can compare/choose an appropriate value?)
FWIW, the book "Color Photography" by Henry Horenstein mentions that color paper experiences reciprocity failure if the exposure is too long and that I should keep my exposure within the 8-20 second range. I never expected to be bumping up on the short end of that range. That being said, does this guidance still apply today?
I was printing a 35mm negative with a 50mm enlarger lens. I had the lens stopped down to f/8 and had a 2-stop ND filter screwed onto it. My exposure times were still only in the 7-9 second range, and the image was dim enough that it was actually hard to make it out while exposing. Is this time range normal/okay? Should I crank it up to f/11 and/or add more ND to bump the time up? (And if I consider using cyan for that, how do I convert dichroic filter added ND into terms of "stops" so I can compare/choose an appropriate value?)
FWIW, the book "Color Photography" by Henry Horenstein mentions that color paper experiences reciprocity failure if the exposure is too long and that I should keep my exposure within the 8-20 second range. I never expected to be bumping up on the short end of that range. That being said, does this guidance still apply today?