maponline
Member
- Joined
- Oct 5, 2014
- Messages
- 23
- Format
- 35mm
This will probably sound like a stupid question to experienced printers, but I am trying to understand the experience of looking at BW photos printed in a book, where often the whitest tones in the picture are in fact not as white as the white of the page. This includes cases where a white background is used and you might have thought (were it not for the page margins) that the background had been blown to pure white.
What is this due to? The paper used for the original print? A choice to never reach pure white in some aesthetic schools?
Is it something controlled while exposing & developing, at the printing stage, or only when reproducing prints in a book?
Many thanks for those who know. It's a small question but it's been bugging me for a while...
What is this due to? The paper used for the original print? A choice to never reach pure white in some aesthetic schools?
Is it something controlled while exposing & developing, at the printing stage, or only when reproducing prints in a book?
Many thanks for those who know. It's a small question but it's been bugging me for a while...