Thin Negative A negative that is underexposed or underdeveloped (or both). A thin negative appears less dense than a normal negative.
Thin Negatives If your negatives are thin, you underexposed. If you have negatives similar to these you will end up having a print that is gray and muddy.
negatives, or negatives containing many heavily exposed areas, contain less water and dry faster than thin negatives.
A condition in which too little light reaches the film, producing a thin negative, a dark slide, or a muddy-looking print. Unipod Also refer as monopod.A one-legged support used to hold the camera steady. Also see "tripod".
Under exposed A condition in which too little light reaches the film, producing a thin negative, a dark trannie, or a muddy-looking print. (see Contrast, Neg, Over exposed, Thin & Paper grade) ...
Underexposure. A condition in which too little light reaches the film or sensor, producing a thin negative (one with little density), a dark slide, a muddy-looking print, or a dark digital image.
The resulting transparency in that case should be a very thin negative, with no detectable density in the shadow regions. The Sabatier exposure should then be increased just to the point at which the shadow regions end up satisfactorily dark.
See also: Film, Thin, Normal, Photograph, Image
|