Yep, like Jim all my home made easels are black. For focusing and composing I mark a grid on the back of a scrap print using a fine tip marking pen. Nice white surface for focusing, judging light levels, ...and the grid makes it a whole lot easier to get the image level and square.
If you haven't tried it yet, make a focusing sheet with a grid. Highly recommended.
Reinhold
www.classicBWphoto.com
...
Another reason for using a focusing sheet instead of focusing directly on the easel surface: if you use a precision grain magnifier you need a piece of paper of the same thickness as your printing paper under the magnifier. Otherwise your plane of focus will not coincide with the papers surface...
As the paper which is optically linked to the emulsion is white then the colour of the base can have no effect.
How important is it to have a yellow easel compared to a white one, to avoid fog?
Which kind of papers are unsafe on a white easel?
Is it only when the light is very brigt, e.g. close to easel or full opening on the lense?
Thanks!
I don't understand how you reach this conclusion. A white base would seem to ensure only that the colors reflected by the easel surface, whatever they may be, will reach the emulsion without being preferentially absorbed (due to the white base admitting all colors equally).
The color of the easel surface definitely makes a difference! You can test this yourself. Figure out what exposure you need to create a medium gray on your paper. Prior to making this exposure, mark the back of the print with a thick black felt-tip pen. Write a number on it or sign it. Then make the exposure and process normally. You should not be able to see your mark on the emulsion side after drying.
I did this test with double-weight Kodak, Ilford and Agfa paper and could clearly see the mark with white easels. They are now painted flat black and the problem is gone. I never had yellow easels, so I don't know how they are affected.
The color of the easel surface definitely makes a difference! You can test this yourself. Figure out what exposure you need to create a medium gray on your paper. Prior to making this exposure, mark the back of the print with a thick black felt-tip pen. Write a number on it or sign it. Then make the exposure and process normally. You should not be able to see your mark on the emulsion side after drying.
I did this test with double-weight Kodak, Ilford and Agfa paper and could clearly see the mark with white easels. They are now painted flat black and the problem is gone. I never had yellow easels, so I don't know how they are affected.
No real need. There is plenty of DoF around your paper plane, several mm in fact. The thickness of the paper lifts the grain magnifier to the theoretical correct plane, but not having it creates a focusing mistake to small to make any difference.
The color of the easel surface definitely makes a difference! You can test this yourself. Figure out what exposure you need to create a medium gray on your paper. Prior to making this exposure, mark the back of the print with a thick black felt-tip pen. Write a number on it or sign it. Then make the exposure and process normally. You should not be able to see your mark on the emulsion side after drying.
So if I have got this right, you can not see the actual black number through the print, as shown by your not seeing it when you have a black easel.
but when light is reflected back by the white easel, You can see the number.
So the number would be appearing whiter? since the reflected back light would make the print darker everywhere except the opaque number, where no light would pass through to fog the print.
Is that right ?
Regards
Bill
So, your actually saying that my prints probably are a bit foggy today because of my white easels, and I can get better details and brilliance in the highlights if I paint my easels black?
If so I better paint them right away![]()
In fact, Gene Nocon suggests not using a scrap piece of paper in his book on darkroom printing. And I personally think that grain magnifier manufacturers have already designed in a typical paper thickness. That's certainly what I would do if I was manufacturing them.
Steve.
Whilst you can see the difference between reflected light using black and white easels, I suspect that the difference between yellow and white would be much smaller as a yellow surface will still reflect a fair amount of blue and green light.
Steve.
The effect of the white easel can be compensated with less exposure and more contrast, which is what you probably do instinctively anyway. The only risk, don't mark your prints on the back prior to exposure, as that may leave a tell-tale sign in the print emulsion.
and from what you say, I can loose some fine detail when I compensate![]()
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