It's one of these terms that seem to be seldom defined, either because it's so simple that it's taken for granted or because it means something different for different people.
In AA's The Negative, there is a pair of photos of a lit lightbulb. The film for the first one was developed with a standard MQ-style developer; for the other, it was developed with pyrocatechin.
In the first one, the lightbulb is just textureless white; in the second one you can see clearly the details of the bulb, almost the filament. In visual terms, separation seem therefore to mean that you can distinguish different shades of gray in a specific area.
But what is "separation" in "highlight/shadow separation" when understood in terms of characteristic curve? Does it mean a flatter slope or a steeper slope?
When people speak of films with long toe (e.g. 320TXP), they often say that these films do not have good shadow separation, or muddy shadows. However, long-toe films are recommended for flash photography because of their highlight separation. From the Kodak documentation, 320TXP has a long toe with an upswept curve.
Straight-line films like 400TX are said to have better shadow separation, i.e. a steeper slope in the shadows region.
On the other hand, highlight separation, as exemplified by the above lightbulb case seem to mean a lower characteristic curve slope: if the curve were too steep, the density would rise too high too quickly, and then become unprintable.
Is "separation" then just a functional term relative to the context, visually meaningful only, but that can be realized differently according to circumstances?
In AA's The Negative, there is a pair of photos of a lit lightbulb. The film for the first one was developed with a standard MQ-style developer; for the other, it was developed with pyrocatechin.
In the first one, the lightbulb is just textureless white; in the second one you can see clearly the details of the bulb, almost the filament. In visual terms, separation seem therefore to mean that you can distinguish different shades of gray in a specific area.
But what is "separation" in "highlight/shadow separation" when understood in terms of characteristic curve? Does it mean a flatter slope or a steeper slope?
When people speak of films with long toe (e.g. 320TXP), they often say that these films do not have good shadow separation, or muddy shadows. However, long-toe films are recommended for flash photography because of their highlight separation. From the Kodak documentation, 320TXP has a long toe with an upswept curve.
Straight-line films like 400TX are said to have better shadow separation, i.e. a steeper slope in the shadows region.
On the other hand, highlight separation, as exemplified by the above lightbulb case seem to mean a lower characteristic curve slope: if the curve were too steep, the density would rise too high too quickly, and then become unprintable.
Is "separation" then just a functional term relative to the context, visually meaningful only, but that can be realized differently according to circumstances?