One example would be Mortensen's "Expose for the highlights and develop for the shadows" method.
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One example would be Mortensen's "Expose for the highlights and develop for the shadows" method.
yup. thats one other way to do it. Except for occasions of great outdoor contrast where he caves in (its in his "Outdoor portraiture") ;)
Other way is to figure out midtone placement & etc.
I honestly think that artistic vision is more important than technical perfection. Never should technical aspect be driving solution. After that it just becomes more of common sense derivative..
Anyway.. Too much talking. Too technical.
8x10, Kodak CSG, R09 (aging) 1:100, 12 minutes rotary, 360mm Heliar @ f5.6, light metered at f11 (-2 stops down to compensate for bellows extension, which i sometime miscalculate)
https://farm2.staticflickr.com/1683/...05cf8d1b_c.jpgLana by Sergei Rodionov, on Flickr
Outstanding, Sergei! (and Lana, of course!)
Lana is looking great. Nice to see!
Thanks, guys. She wanted new headshot, to sort of document progress on hair growing :)
Hey SergeiR,
If you don't mind my asking... What temp are you processing at with R09 at 1:100 for 12 mins? I've always sat in awe of the smooth tonal range you're ability to pull out of x-ray film. In all my use of Ektascan, I've not even come close to your results. Really thinking about giving the Kodak CSG film a go now. Lovely portrait!!
Thanks!
Thank you.
No secrets about it - its just tap water, around room temp, which for Dallas is about 70 degrees on typical day.
(Dallas is awesome like that, most of time you can do C41 or E6 processing without any true water baths :))
I use two rotary processors - Jobo CPE on film setting (1 i think it is) or Unicolor (single setting) that is a bit faster. I love Unicolor for being water-less and taking less space, but its really annoying trying to catch tank all the time, as it keeps trying to run off the processor ( i am sure i can hack something for it, but oh well)
Kodak BioMax XAR Film, I shot as ISO 35, (f4.5, 1/15s) then I ran it through a tray of X-ray film T2 developer (diluted 3 times) for just one minutes. The film was transferred to the water tray and after fix for 5 min. After fixation film was washed for 10-15 minutes in running water.
Carl Zeiss 21cm f4.5 210mm Tessar, Improved Seneca View Camera (1906), 5x7 https://www.flickr.com/photos/126027...7646002305868/
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