Split Grade Printing Examples
Wednesday, February 22, 2012 at 10:35PM
Mat Marrash in How To, Photography, b&w, black and white, darkroom, darkroom, fiber paper, fine art, fine art, ilford, mat marrash, mgiv, photography, pyrocat hd, split grade printing

While souping some 16x20's in the darkroom this evening, I was reminded of a question friend and fellow film photographer Dan Domme (Flickr) asked a few days ago about split grade printing. He was basically wondering how one can print two different grades onto silver paper, and why one would print like that. So, in lazy, not wanting to write up a long blog post, fashion, here's a quick video detailing what split grade printing is, what negatives you should use it on, and some examples. Enjoy!

If you've never tried split grade printing before, all you need is some: variable contrast papers (graded won't work), a contrasty negative, B&W filter set (00-5 preferred), and a little bit of darkroom time, and you're all set. It's very easy to do, and the results are not too shabby! If used with negatives that don't require too much dodging and burning, it's a very easy way to get consistent, contrasty results with silver gelatin printing. Thanks for looking, and hope you can try out this helpful darkroom hint for yourself.

Article originally appeared on Mat Marrash, Analog Photographer, Findlay Ohio Film Photography (http://matmarrash.com/).
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