erikhaugsby
killer of threads
Many times, especially when wet printing, I have difficulty in fully judging how a print will look until after it has developed as a positive. Can any of you here read the nuances of a negative as easily as a positive?
Jamie123 said:When I hold up a negative to a light I can sometimes see the "positive". hope this makes sense 🙂
Jamie123 said:When I hold up a negative to a light I can sometimes see the "positive". hope this makes sense 🙂
Jamie123 said:When I hold up a negative to a light I can sometimes see the "positive". hope this makes sense 🙂
Ha! That's me. I'm pretty good at reading a negative, and I often carry an un-metered camera while leaving the meter at home. My negatives generally come out fine. At least they are always printable.bmattock said:These people who can 'see' a negative probably also think they can eyeball their exposure too. Just kidding.
This works perfectly, when the background behind the negative is black, and you hold the neg toward a light source. So the transparent part of the neg gets dark, and the black part, when well reflected, gehts light. I used a matte black cloth and an old table lamp. Controlled my negs in positive with a magnifier, before making contact prints or scanning them.Jamie123 said:When I hold up a negative to a light I can sometimes see the "positive". hope this makes sense 🙂