I wish more people realized that. Most of his really good stuff succeeds despite “poor” negative quality for one reason or another. The other thing you find is “well controlled” negatives which nevertheless were not easy to print.
In reality, as long as exposure is sufficient to record what you need, there is not much else in the way of true control in the making of negatives that translates to high print quality. You make great prints with printing technique work. Printing (or editing in digital/hybrid) is where we have the real control.
I don't know Michael... (just musing here)
While I agree that printing technique is the path to great prints, I sure find well-exposed and well-developed negatives a lot easier to print than under-exposed and under-developed ones.
Yeah, I can print through a #47 blue filter to get maximum contrast and dodge shadows up to get some "substance" there, but usually those prints don't fall in the "excellent" category.
I think many people miss that the ZS isn't as precise as we think. As far as exposure goes, it's only purpose is to get "exposure sufficient to record what you need."
Given the variation in metering equipment, etc. when the ZS was developed, doing a personal E.I. test was important. These days, using box speed plus a fraction of a stop safety factor and then adjusting as needed depending on trends in the results seems an equally viable and easier approach.
We seem to take for granted that using box speed and any old meter will get us sufficient exposure now, so we don't have to test. I think, however, that there are a whole lot of beginners' problems that would simply go away if one did a quick test for "sufficient exposure."
Just because AA managed to make some good prints from less-than-ideal negatives is no reason to toss the baby out with the bath water. Sure, a well-exposed and developed negative doesn't guarantee a good print, or and easy print for that matter, but I'll sure take one of those as a starting point instead of a poorly-exposed and developed one.
And, despite the versatility of VC papers, I'm still going to develop N+ and N- for appropriate subjects. Yes, if I need N-3, I'll just develop N-1 and deal with the rest when printing and vice-versa, but tailoring development to SBR still has a place.
Best,
Doremus