>You can subtract shades of grey - when printing - but realy not add them.
If
>they are gone (in a too hard neg.), they are really gone.

BTW - one of the reasons I like Pentax *ist D. The images are soft and not
over sharpened. This means I don't loose information before I even get to
see my recordings. I will decide later, which shades I don't want. The
competing camera brands (Rebel and  D70) seem to me to have too much "on
board sharpening" and "on board contrast". They loose information from the
start. They are for amateurs - not for the enthusiast or pro.
Regards
Jens Bladt
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://hjem.get2net.dk/bladt


-----Oprindelig meddelelse-----
Fra: Jens Bladt [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sendt: 20. maj 2005 09:09
Til: [email protected]
Emne: RE: Understanding exposure? Recommendations?


I don't agree. It has nothing to do with printing. We are talking about
exposure here - not about how to resque faulty exposures.

First of all, to be a good printer (I belive, I used to be one - before the
digital revolution) it's prefered to start out with the best possible
negative (or digital image). That is properly exposed negatives, slides or
image files. Where all shades between black and white are represented.
When printing you can "subtract" to get what you want.
Secondly, I was still talking about the negs, not the prints. You can't get
out of a print what's not there in a neg.
You can subtract shades of grey - when printing - but realy not add them. If
they are gone (in a too hard neg.), they are really gone.

This is also one of the reasons that the "contrast/brightness" tool is a
dangerous tool. You loose information. Using "levels" or "shadow/highlight"
is better.


Jens Bladt
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://hjem.get2net.dk/bladt


-----Oprindelig meddelelse-----
Fra: Bob W [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sendt: 20. maj 2005 08:33
Til: [email protected]
Emne: RE: Understanding exposure? Recommendations?


Yes - those things are important for people who want to go on to become good
printers. But you have to be able to walk before you can run.

--
Cheers,
 Bob

>
> That's true, Bob.
> But you are missing out good old techniques to increase
> contrast by underexsposure/overdevelopment and decreasing
> contrast by overexsposure/underdevelopment.
>
>
>
> I recommend slide film lab as a better medium for early
> lessons in exposure.
> There are too many variables involved in b&w development that
> detract from the early important stuff about exposure.
>



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