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After
the recent deluge it is nice to be sitting back in the garden office
writing this post and enjoying the late afternoon sun with my friend
the cat. It is quite surprising how peaceful it can be in such a
built up area. Not as negative as you thought but I digress.
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The day was very bright that the light meter read a six stop difference between the house wall in the background and the shadow cast by the barn. I over exposed the negative by two and a half stops. |
We
all strive to produce the perfect negative but it was not until
recently that it dawned on me that it does not necessarily translate
to the perfect print. So what is the perfect print? One that is easy
to print but what do they mean by easy to print? One that does not
require a lot of dodging and burning. A single exposure success
wouldn't that be the perfect print! With the way the negative sees
the scene in front of it and all the variables in its path is it not
inevitable that you will have to manipulate the image projected onto
the base board of the enlarger to produce the perfect print?
Recently
I came close to my interpretation of the perfect print, one that does
not require a lot of manipulation. By placing the test strip in such
a way that the area that needed burning in was exposed to several
different timed exposure segments this allowed me to add the extra
time for that area to the first print. With experience the hit or
miss aspect of the test strip process is lessened. It still doesn't
take away that bit of a buzz when it all falls into place. Something
I've never had with digital.