benjaminlr
Member
I read this on Ken Rockwell's website:
"People use a fast scan of the image as a tracing background, and use Photoshop's painting tools to paint yellow, gray and magenta over the image.
The gray is for dodging.
Yellow and magenta are for local contrast manipulation with variable contrast paper.
These artists then load transparency film into their $99 inkjets, and sandwich this as a mask along with their negatives in their enlarger!
This is a brilliant technique. It allows all the 3-D detail from a direct optical print, and allows minute adjustment, and repeatable results. "
Did anyone try this out it's simple and clever !!!
"People use a fast scan of the image as a tracing background, and use Photoshop's painting tools to paint yellow, gray and magenta over the image.
The gray is for dodging.
Yellow and magenta are for local contrast manipulation with variable contrast paper.
These artists then load transparency film into their $99 inkjets, and sandwich this as a mask along with their negatives in their enlarger!
This is a brilliant technique. It allows all the 3-D detail from a direct optical print, and allows minute adjustment, and repeatable results. "
Did anyone try this out it's simple and clever !!!