Advantage of Optical Prints
First, I attempted to get a print with all the delicate tones and smooth the image out a bit. The scan has some blown highlights where there is still detail in the negative, so I wanted to make that work a bit better. You’ll find that the print is very similar to the negative, except with a little less contrast overall. It’s a straight print, with no dodging and burning.
One of the cool things about working with variable contrast paper is that you can burn and dodge at different contrasts. This picture needs better tones, otherwise it is just too stark. I chose to do all the burning using a #00 filter (lowest contrast and smoothest tones). The print is primarily exposed for the plow, with the adjustments made to the rest of the image. As you can see by the straight print I made, the bush in the top left kind of dominates the picture, which is not what I want. I chose to dodge it a full stop, so it isn’t as heavy and doesn’t draw the eye away from the plow. The edges needed attention, and there was a whole area that was lacking detail that needed it. The two sides and the bottom I burned in for 1/3 stop. The top area where the grass was, I burned in for a full stop. It’s now that you can appreciate the detail still in the negative that the scanner just couldn’t handle.
This particular print I did change the base exposure for the print unwittingly, so the plow is darker than I like. However, that is easily corrected. When I get a new print of this, I’ll fix that problem.



