
Friday, 27 January 2012
Enlarging len which aperture?

Thursday, 26 January 2012
Dodging and burning.
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A selection of dodgers |
No matter how well you expose and develop your negatives, when it comes to making a positive you will need to equalize the exposure by holding back and burning in to keep the detail in the highlights and shadow areas. In a lot of cases it is not possible to alter the overall exposure time to take these deficiency's in to account. In these cases dodgers as the name implies will help you get round this problem. You can use your hands, fingers, pieces of card, a length of wire with a cut out of card stuck to it and cards with holes in them.
![]() |
Holding back |
No matter how well you expose and develop your negatives, when it comes to making a positive you will need to equalize the exposure by holding back and burning in to keep the detail in the highlights and shadow areas. In a lot of cases it is not possible to alter the overall exposure time to take these deficiency's in to account. In these cases dodgers as the name implies will help you get round this problem. You can use your hands, fingers, pieces of card, a length of wire with a cut out of card stuck to it and cards with holes in them.
![]() |
Burnning in |
Dodgers are
not just for correcting problems, they are there also for creative purposes for
example to bring out some extra drama in the scene, add a shaft of light where
there was none or to bring two pictures together where one maybe lacking any
sky detail.
Labels:
composition,
darkroom,
dodger,
exposure,
expression,
highlight,
image,
photograph,
print,
shadow,
tool
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