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Hands up! Who remembers Fry's Five Boys Chocolate? You know.
The one with the picture of the five expressions on a boy's
face as he anticipated, enjoyed, then reminisced about the
pleasure of the chocolate bar. I often see a photographic
four face equivalent.
I stand there in front of a new group of keen monochrome
photographers. The place is packed. The first audience at
the beginning of the day is full of vim and vigour, keen to
be out and round the NEC hall for the Focus on Imaging exhibition
after this Ilford Masterclass. By the end of the day, for
my final class, they come in very glad to be able to rest
their weary feet after a day around the hall.
But all audiences, fresh or tired, young or old, North or
South, display the same four reactions at the same point fairly
early on in the class. It comes when I make the point that
you can't make a fine print from a coarse negative. Most of
the negatives that come through the door of my professional
printing service are still pretty coarse - underexposed and
overdeveloped, burned out highlights and empty shadows with
harsh graduation, graininess and poor sharpness.
There are many people who believe that if they can just learn
the magic secret, as alchemists strove for the spell that
would turn base metals into gold, they will be able to turn
out prints with deep luminous detailed shadows, gleaming graduated
highlights, and a full rich palette of well separated tones
between; that there is some mysterious black art in my darkroom
that I hide away from innocent eyes. If only they can learn
it, they will suddenly be able to turn their negatives into
the glowing prints they envisaged at the moment of making
the camera exposure.
Sorry. The answer's in the negative. Literally. An improperly
exposed and developed negative will never make a true fine
print. Acceptable, even good, yes. Fine, no. Of course there
are those who would like to con us into thinking that there
are such black darkroom arts, because it justifies a 'guru'
position. The current alchemist's spell is split grading.
People are using this convinced that they are uncovering print
tones with it that unachievable by simple straight print exposure
methods. Wrong. It just takes longer to achieve exactly the
same result. But the self-delusion makes it feel good as we
wrap ourselves in the emperor's new clothes.
Sorry, we can perform rescue jobs on inadequate negatives
by devices like extreme dodging and burning, condenser and
semi-point source illumination, multiple grade printing, preflashing,
controlled fogging, latent image pre-bleaching, selective
toning and post bleaching to get some kind of result. But
the fine negative prints like a dream without all this hocus
pocus, and if we care to apply judiciously a few special techniques
to it, the resulting print will shine on the wall as if back-illuminated.
We won't need any of the so-called 'creative' tarting up against
which I had my rant in Ag magazine.
As I look around I see the four reactions writ large on the
faces. Not the Fry's Five Boys, but the Photo Four Boys.
The first, a tiny minority, look comfortable. They know the
system and feel at ease with it.
The second, another minority, are those who prefer to rubbish
and dismiss what they don't understand or can't do. It's a
sort of photographic xenophobia. 'Let's pretend I am superior,
then I won't have to admit my ignorance'. Like xenophobes,
they tend to be loudly outspoken and overbearing. We saw a
good deal of the same thing among many senior business executives
who insisted that their staff use PCs, indeed used IT efficiency
to cut staff numbers, yet never had a VDU on their own desk
and insisted on shorthand dictation to a secretary for frequently
revised drafts.
With the photographic zone system xenophobe, expect to hear
him speak disparagingly of zone system users as 'technical
nerds', 'zone system techies', 'anoraks' or similar patronising
clichés. The only trouble with these people suffering
from a superiority complex is that when you actually see their
pictures, you realise that they don't have the right to be
patronising about anyone!
The third group of faces is another minority. On these shine
disdain. "I am an artist", the faces silently shout, "and
deigning to admit that craft skills can have any place in
art would instantly destroy my psued status. Just let me find
a new gimmick to cause shock, and I will be ecstatic".
Then there's the rest, the majority. The expressions on their
faces hover somewhere between total bafflement, blind panic,
and utter boredom.
When I ask, by a show of hands, how they decide what film
speed to set on their camera when loading a film, the great
majority of the group always let the cassette bar code set
it for them on electronically controlled cameras, or they
set it from the speed printed on the film box with older cameras.
A few don't. They seem to uprate the speed. It seems macho
somehow to do that.
When I ask the group what negative development time they
use, they say "what the maker prints in the instructions".
When pressed, most admit to giving 'a little bit extra, just
to be safe', which actually means, of course, giving 'a little
bit extra just to make things worse'.
Most of the people in the Masterclass room, other than the
few committed zone system users, it transpires, have no understanding
at all of the link between subject brightness range, film
speed, exposure, and development time, and that all these
are variables. Many have spent big money on the latest camera
systems with 'deadly accurate' microchip controlled exposure
systems (steadily more sophisticated ways of getting the exposure
precisely wrong it seems sometimes).
Continued ...
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