I have an opportunity to pick up a 4x5 enlarger (Omega D5 Chromega, I think, still need to do some homework on that, but color capable anyway) for a very nominal price. My existing workflow is to scan my negs and trannies on a Nikon Coolscan 9000 for 35mm and MF, and an Epson V750 for sheet film. I am pretty comfortable manipulating the scans in Photoshop to get a decent final printed image (inkjet), and have made satisfactory prints up to 17x25" this way. Am I likely to find an improvement in my results using darkroom enlarging rather than scanning, or will I just be trading time at a computer for time in a darkroom? Currently I shoot mostly color, and send all my film out for commercial development (working slowly towards doing my own B&W development, and had been planning on contact printing for 8x10, maybe 5x7 and depending on what the future brings, perhaps 4x10 as well, so I might be moving towards a bit of a darkroom setup regardless of the enlarger decision). Anyway, I guess my basic question is the relative quality I might expect from good old fashioned enlargements and chemical processing vs my current electronic workflow (and keeping in mind that I will be learning darkroom skills from scratch, as opposed to being at least part way up the electronic learning curve). From the little reading I have done, I gather that if I want to try any alt processes down the line that they mostly involve contact printing anyway, true? Would the enlarger open up any other printing options that I cannot achieve electronically or by contact printing? Bottom line, is it worth the cost and trouble to learn the art of using an enlarger, would an increment in quality and available processes justify a substantial investment of time, carpentry, and money? My inclincation is that the benefit does not justify the time, effort, and expense, but I hope to learn more and perhaps otherwise from all of you and your collective experience.
Thanks ahead of time for your help and guidance,
Larry