Patrick Robert James
Member
- Joined
- Jul 31, 2012
- Messages
- 3,505
- Format
- 35mm RF
I have the RHD Zonemaster, Darkroom Automations and the Ilford EM-10.
I used to use the EM-10 for small quick prints. I had it figured out that a value on the meter was equivalent to a certain highlight tone so I set the meter to that value and changed the aperture (helps to have a stepless aperture on the lens) until it agreed, then measured the shadows and used that value to read off a small chart I made through trial and error to get the contrast grade. IIRC I had to adjust the exposure a bit too. Pretty simple. I used it for making a lot of small proof prints since they weren't that important. Just needed a ballpark and I didn't care how sharp they were. I think there might be a chart out there, maybe in Way Beyond Monochrome, that describes how to use it. It is also used this way to keep your exposures constant if you are going to a different size print. Again, it helps to have a stepless aperture. They are cheap. It is probably worth your while to get one if you change sizes often.
I picked up the DA meter quite a few years ago and it is nice. Very well made. The problem I have with it though is it took too much math to arrive at an exposure/grade and I don't want to do math in the darkroom, I just want to print. I still use it though because one mode it has makes a comparison and it is great to check blank skies to make sure I get an even tone without having to do any tests. I do a quick measurement and then I can dodge or burn according to it without ever making a test. It is good for making comparisons too for different parts of an image.
I picked up the Zonemaster a few years ago. Yes the calibration is a pain. It doesn't use that much paper though, just time. I use it to get in the ball park. Just a decent enough print so I can see what is up with it. Then I go from there. It does save time with test strips for sure. Can you get a perfect print on the first try with it? I guess if you are not that picky with how you define perfect, sure. Personally I think the calibration is not super accurate over time since papers age, developers change a bit with time, etc. Lsst time I checked they had a page on their website that people would post their calibration numbers. You can just input those and it is decent enough. The only issue is what filters you use. That can change things. I have different enlargers and they are not the same. My 4x5 Saunders is a "constant exposure" head which is different than using the below the lens Ilford filters on my Leica and Minox enlargers. If you only have one enlarger though that is a moot point.
One thing to mention is you can buy a cheap Kodak projection print scale that you just place on the paper and expose for a minute. You might want to find one of those. Pretty simple way to find your exposure.
Hope that helps you...
I used to use the EM-10 for small quick prints. I had it figured out that a value on the meter was equivalent to a certain highlight tone so I set the meter to that value and changed the aperture (helps to have a stepless aperture on the lens) until it agreed, then measured the shadows and used that value to read off a small chart I made through trial and error to get the contrast grade. IIRC I had to adjust the exposure a bit too. Pretty simple. I used it for making a lot of small proof prints since they weren't that important. Just needed a ballpark and I didn't care how sharp they were. I think there might be a chart out there, maybe in Way Beyond Monochrome, that describes how to use it. It is also used this way to keep your exposures constant if you are going to a different size print. Again, it helps to have a stepless aperture. They are cheap. It is probably worth your while to get one if you change sizes often.
I picked up the DA meter quite a few years ago and it is nice. Very well made. The problem I have with it though is it took too much math to arrive at an exposure/grade and I don't want to do math in the darkroom, I just want to print. I still use it though because one mode it has makes a comparison and it is great to check blank skies to make sure I get an even tone without having to do any tests. I do a quick measurement and then I can dodge or burn according to it without ever making a test. It is good for making comparisons too for different parts of an image.
I picked up the Zonemaster a few years ago. Yes the calibration is a pain. It doesn't use that much paper though, just time. I use it to get in the ball park. Just a decent enough print so I can see what is up with it. Then I go from there. It does save time with test strips for sure. Can you get a perfect print on the first try with it? I guess if you are not that picky with how you define perfect, sure. Personally I think the calibration is not super accurate over time since papers age, developers change a bit with time, etc. Lsst time I checked they had a page on their website that people would post their calibration numbers. You can just input those and it is decent enough. The only issue is what filters you use. That can change things. I have different enlargers and they are not the same. My 4x5 Saunders is a "constant exposure" head which is different than using the below the lens Ilford filters on my Leica and Minox enlargers. If you only have one enlarger though that is a moot point.
One thing to mention is you can buy a cheap Kodak projection print scale that you just place on the paper and expose for a minute. You might want to find one of those. Pretty simple way to find your exposure.
Hope that helps you...
