Good morning Jmal,
I like small prints on occasion as well. In the three following threads you perhaps will glean some very interesting insights from forum members concerning small prints. Perhaps the most interesting things I've learned about small prints is that with really old lenses or lenses with no coatings and simple elements (many times) they do not enlarge well over 5x. As a side note, look at the beauty that the Petzval lens shooters get in the ULF forum with minimum enlargement or with contact prints. However with their unique characteristics, look, signature, flare, bokeh, flaws, they make some of the most beautiful small prints I've ever seen. In fact, even a pinhole produced image can be beautiful at contact print size. I wish these images from older design lenses would "hold together" when printed large, I (personally) have not found it to be so, only the exception. For bigger prints I use bigger negatives. Even with larger negatives, sometimes I see a loss in beauty when enlarged much beyond 5x.
Yes, for competition, exhibition, and of course customer needs, one prints to the size required. But I have found quite by chance that many folks, mostly females request, prefer, and purchase my smaller prints of between 5 and 20 square inches in size. In some ways I'm surprised at this, some have replied when asked why do you choose the little pictures, that it is the intimacy, the mystery of whats hidden, plus the fact you can display lots of little pictures and only a few big ones. I believe it might have something to do with the fact that most folks grew up with perhaps the warm memories and familiarty of "little" B&W pictures and that we have been bombarded throughout the last 30+ years with large prints, posters, billboards and large television images. Perhaps the jewell like B&W print harkens back to a perceived much more romantic era. Maybe this is why WE still enjoy shooting these wonderful old technology cameras rather than following the heretics and philistines with their doctrine of 1s +0s.
Have fun, be happy,
Sam H.
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