Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/01/22

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Subject: [Leica] RE: Way OT: Shooting 8x10 LF and contact printing
From: puff11 at comcast.net (Norm Aubin)
Date: Sun Jan 22 10:16:39 2006

 Scott,

While not an expert on it, I do have a bit of experience contact printing
large format.

It has a virtue all it's own when done from a large film negative - the
sharpness and tonal scale are every bit as good as is possible for the film
and camera to render.  You can become extremely frustrated when you see
prints made from enlarged negatives, they somehow seem less satisfying after
you get used to the results of large format contact printing. The inherent
danger is that the results can be so very addictive that you suddenly find
yourself lusting for an 11x14 or a 12x20 banquet camera!  

Thank god for digital output - now you can scan any high quality negative
(read Leica there), enlarge and manipulate it in Photoshop as you would in
the darkroom,  print it to clear acetate (Pictorio has an excellent
transparency paper), and contact print it like a negative.   All the
spotting, dodging and burning, contrast adjustments, etc, are already done,
consistently and repeatable!  Five years later the print is still easily
re-done, without having to re-read an old print-map.

I have done this for silver and platinum papers, and it works great after
you figure out the contrast curve for the papers of your choice.  Not a
whole lot different in concept to selecting developers for their contrast
and tonal  rendition on various papers.  In this case you have to figure out
the tonal response of the paper to the printed negative, but it is easily
tested and calibrated.

If you're sticking to black and white papers you can get by with a contact
printing frame and a light bulb, maybe with a timer in the loop, but an
audible metronome and a cardboard sheet work every bit as good.  In my
experience the most underrated and most critical piece of equipment is the
contact printing frame.  It must of course be flat, have high quality glass,
be large enough to fit the film you are working with, and have secure but
easily used pinch bars or clamps on the back to secure the film/paper under
constant and even pressure.  A split back is best if you think you might
ever use a printing out paper, as it lets you open the back and evaluate
half the paper's development, while holding the other half secure to assure
proper re-alignment when you close it back up.  New quality frames are in
the $100 and up range, depending on size, so shop used if you must, but do
not compromise quality to save money, you'll spend it later and hate the
time in between.

One that has enough wooden or metal frame area around the glass is useful -
you want to me able to stick tape on the edges, where you can make marks and
indicators to serve as a guide for dodging and burning.  Since the image is
contact printed, you lack the projected visual scene with which you compare
your print map and then manipulate.  For example - say you've test printed
and determined that the foreground needs a 25% burn in with feathering along
an area of 1/4 to 1 inch, to blend into a transition area, all this
occurring about 3 inches up from the bottom of the negative.  Once you place
a new sheet of paper into the frame and put it under the light - how do you
see this area?  If you take your test print from before, lay it near the
frame, put tape along the frame so that you can mark areas as reference
points, then you have an external reference guide so that your dodging and
burning can be keyed to these points.  You can make a grid, or you can use
flagging symbols telling yourself where to burn, where to dodge, and even
number them to indicate what order you are doing this in, etc.

One thing this will do for you is instill the desire to get a damn good
exposure on the film in the first place.  The better the negative, and the
better handled it is, the less effort to make a contact print that is a gem
to behold.

BTW, another way to try out this whole concept is to take your Leica
negative and enlarge/project it onto a sheet of Ilford Ortho film, or any
other copy neg film, and then contact print this to make an inter-neg that
you then contact print on paper.  This way a 35mm negative can be made into
a 8x10 positive, then contact printed (reversed) into an 8x10 negative, and
this is used for contact printing.  Digital negative making is easier, but
only if you have a digital set up.

As far as cameras go, there are a ton of new and used ones out there, and if
your preference is studio work only, then either rail or flat bed will work,
but a rail camera will give you a far better range of movements.  These are
critical for a lot of still life and table top work, but are over-kill for
most portraiture.  For portraiture you also needn't have near as much bellow
reach as for table top & still life, where you may need twice the bellows
length as the focal length of the lens (for 1:1 life size images).  The most
useful guide I've found yet for view camera use and lens selection is Steve
Simmons' book titled "Using The View Camera" (ISBN 0-8174-6353-4).

Of course, once you start purchasing all the films and papers and chemicals,
you will undoubtedly start stimulating the vendors, and who knows, maybe add
further impetus to the film renaissance that is occurring even as we speak!

Best of light,
Norm


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Replies: Reply from scott at adrenaline.com (Scott McLoughlin) ([Leica] RE: Way OT: Shooting 8x10 LF and contact printing)