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Re: [OM] Re: Moonrise, Hernandez (was "Best six dollars" etc.)

Subject: Re: [OM] Re: Moonrise, Hernandez (was "Best six dollars" etc.)
From: Joel Wilcox <jowilcox@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Fri, 11 Dec 1998 23:29:16 -0600
At 07:46 PM 12/11/1998 -0800, George you wrote:
>
>But my B&W printing just ain't makin' it yet.  One thing I have learned
>is that B&W printing is much more of an art form than Cibachrome. 

That's what I've found too.  To paraphrase Robert Frost, B&W is like
playing tennis without a net.  With Ciba there aren't a lot of choices:
you've got to get exposure and color correct, but you've got the
transparency for the bedrock values.  One can't really say what the
"correct" print of a B&W negative is.

 And every one of
>their successful prints is bleached to some extent. 
>

Amazing. I had no idea it was SOP.

>Just last Sat at our meeting one member, Barry Sherman, brought a print
>in which geyser steam was a major component.  I was quite surprised to
>hear he had to bleach the steam quite a bit to bring out the fine
>highlight detail he had achieved in the print.  In short, B&W fine art
>printing is a challenge that Ansel mastered and I aspire to.
>
>George
>

Go for it, George. I got bummed out with B&W and 35mm about 10 years ago.
I really think it is very difficult to achieve fine art quality B&W in the
35mm format, at least when your main favored subjects are landscapes.  I
didn't have the dough to make the leap to MF, so I just stayed with slides.
 Film scanning has inspired renewed interest.  Most people don't like
inkjet B&W prints because the "color" is askew, but I've had lots of fun
with it, although I wouldn't call it fine art printing by any stretch of
the imagination.

Best,

Joel

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