Donald Miller
Member
- Joined
- Dec 21, 2002
- Messages
- 6,230
- Format
- Large Format
I think perhaps the consensus among those who have taken this stance (including myself) is that it IS subtle if you are exposing and processing to match the system; it's only obvious if you don't.
Alternatively, you can accentuate the differences by exposing and developing for the two systems.
In fact, on checking back through the thread, I find it's not so much 'some' as 'all' who have said something to this effect.
Several of us have and can use both diffusion and condenser heads and apparently do not see as much difference as you do -- though of course, there are wide variations of sensitivity to a given phenomenon, e.g. grain, bokeh, tonality...
Cheers,
R.
Roger,
I'm afraid that I probably don't fit into your self designated consensus on this matter. I have printed with cold light (Aristo on Omega D2VXL)...more recently with a Saunders 4550 VCCE (diffusion) and still more recently with a Durst 138S (condenser). I use a densitometer (Xrite 300 TR) to arrive at the suitable negative density range to fit the papers that I use. I find a very distinct difference in prints from both types of light sources. The difference lies in the area of sharpness and local contrast. It is my strongly formed opinion that photographs exhibiting the greatest "presence" are those that exhibit the greatest local contrast...for it is that matter that contributes the greatest extent to the "glow" possible in a well exposed and well printed silver gelatin print.
I still own the Saunders enlarger (acknowledged by most to be a very good enlarger) but have not used it in over two years because it simply does not provide what I want in a print.
While this is addressing another thread that you have posted on "idiot proof prints" and I apologize to those that read this for comingling the two threads, I will address this matter under this thread since I think that it is not the large regions of light and dark tones that I understand you to describe as being most formative to prints with large or long lasting acceptance...it is the presence that is possible from a well printed print...at least from a technical standpoint...more important is the vision of the artist...To wit: does the photographer evidence the ability to produce distinctive and original work...not simply redundant copies of what has gone before?
I apologize for this lengthy and perhaps disjointed response...I am "out of pocket" at present...sitting in an internet cafe in Laoag City. The weather is cool...the streets are full of interesting photographic opportunities.