Roger Cole
Subscriber
That doesn't really show anything though. The point would be to make a print using filters (not unfiltered) and then split grade, and try your best to make them as close to identical as possible. Just making one without a filter (they may call it grade 2 but that doesn't mean it's the same as a grade 2 filter and certainly doesn't mean it's the same as any particular combination of hard and soft filter split printing) and a split grade the way you like is... it's not even apples to oranges, even if you do match some arbitrary midtone. It's apples to chicken or something.
It's clearly softer. The only semi-meaningful comparison would be to try 2.5, 3 etc. grade filters and match as close as you can across all the tones. Even then, with filters, you might well end up with a situation where, say, a grade 3 is just a bit more contrasty than the split grade while 2.5 is a bit less, while with a continuously variable VC or colorhead you could easily match an effective grade 2.85 or whatever.
This seems more a near religious belief than anything empirical so I'm bowing out. The vast majority of us do this for fun and self expression. We can and should do it however pleases us most.
It's clearly softer. The only semi-meaningful comparison would be to try 2.5, 3 etc. grade filters and match as close as you can across all the tones. Even then, with filters, you might well end up with a situation where, say, a grade 3 is just a bit more contrasty than the split grade while 2.5 is a bit less, while with a continuously variable VC or colorhead you could easily match an effective grade 2.85 or whatever.
This seems more a near religious belief than anything empirical so I'm bowing out. The vast majority of us do this for fun and self expression. We can and should do it however pleases us most.