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Dodge and Burn Project
When a photographer shoots a subject that has more contrast or a greater brightness range than the film can record the final print in the darkroom may lack detail in either the shadows or the hightlights. In the darkroom the photographer must dodge or burn a print to fix it. MOST pictures need one or the other for best results.
DODGE
This is where a portion of a print is too dark in the shadows after the main exposure is made on the enlarger. To cure this a new exposure is made in the enlarger during which time the photographer holds back or shades the problem area using their hand or a piece of cardboard on the end of a paper clip. This may only be done for a few seconds during the enlarger exposure.
BURN
This is where a portion of a print is too white after the main exposure on the enlarger. The majority of the print looks good, so additional exposure would make it too dark. The cure, to add additional light ONLY to the white area. This will be adding additional exposure to an area that looks dark on the enlarger image as you view it in the paper. To do this you cut a hole in cardboard or use your hand in a cup shape to project a beam of light back onto the paper AFTER the main exposure.
For this assignment you need to find a negative that prints with a dark shadow or bright highlight that needs these techniques done to it. MAKE two prints...one where no additional work was done and one where EITHER dodge or burn was done to make the print good. This is a challenge assignment for students with good darkroom skills.
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