Dear PE,
I'm inclined to regard 'minimum' as 'the least you can get away with and still like the tonality'. At this point, of course, we're getting into fractional gradients -- yet another underrated Kodak analysis, even if the 'first excellent prints' weren't all that excellent.
I've not seen them, but I'm told they're rather flat 5x7 inch contact prints. Any further comments on that description?
Cheers,
R.
Roger;
As you go onto the toe, all prints become flat and lifeless and rather grainy. These are underexposed.
A print is really the intgral, point by point of the product of two curves, the film and the paper. If you are on a straight line, then one is a constant (the film) and the other is mostly a constant (the paper) except for the toe and shoulder.
This is a lossy process like JPG image compression, and gives a blah looking print.
Thats why I always stay off the toe and try to stay on the high part of the straight line, where I'm using the finest grains in the film, and also where the fill in of the developing silver reduces grain even further.
So, I overexpose to get better contrast and less loss. Or at least, I lessen the chance of it happening.
PE