Kev M
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How do you make decent contact prints, mine really suck and I can't get them sorted.
Les Maclean recommends printing at grade 1 to minimise the contrast so that you can get the maximum detail out of the negative but how do judge the exposure time on a low contrast print? With a normal print I'll split grade for the blacks and whites or if single grading base the timing on the mid-black point and D&B the rest. So how dark should you make a low contrast contact print?
The second problem is how do you judge that timing when you've bracketed the exposures? because technically each neg should require a different printing time. Or do you pick the most suitable frame (perhaps the most dense) before you start and base your contact print around that and stuff the rest of them?
Les Maclean's book doesn't really touch on this as he uses the zone system and 5 or more film backs so that bracketed shots are taken on different rolls of film and each film is processed with the same dynamic range.
It's alright for some but us mere mortals only have two backs, one in use and one prep'd so all bracketing gets done on the one roll.
TIA,
Kev
Les Maclean recommends printing at grade 1 to minimise the contrast so that you can get the maximum detail out of the negative but how do judge the exposure time on a low contrast print? With a normal print I'll split grade for the blacks and whites or if single grading base the timing on the mid-black point and D&B the rest. So how dark should you make a low contrast contact print?
The second problem is how do you judge that timing when you've bracketed the exposures? because technically each neg should require a different printing time. Or do you pick the most suitable frame (perhaps the most dense) before you start and base your contact print around that and stuff the rest of them?
Les Maclean's book doesn't really touch on this as he uses the zone system and 5 or more film backs so that bracketed shots are taken on different rolls of film and each film is processed with the same dynamic range.
It's alright for some but us mere mortals only have two backs, one in use and one prep'd so all bracketing gets done on the one roll.
TIA,
Kev
At least they're 6x6 not 35mm, they'd be almost impossible.