markbarendt
Member
Point meter at the camera while you are standing in the sunlit part of the scene, then walk to the shaded part of the scene and point at the camera. Add 5 to the difference to obtain your SBR. From the SBR you will find development time and EI (which in the BTZS system floats with development time).
That's a decent summary of how BTZS deals with the difference between taking incident metering and reflective spot readings.
Doubling the EI on a shadow reading (say from 100 to 200) doesn't lead to a 1-stop underexposure though.
We have to remember that an incident meter always tries to suggest a camera setting that will place the subjects in the measured light "normally", like caucasian skin at Zone VI or so. Caucasian skin at Zone VI in the shadow area isn't normal, IV or V more likely.
That means that if the incident meter is in the shadows the meter reading should suggest a setting that would normally result in too much camera exposure. Doubling the EI number in brings the suggested camera setting back closer to where a normal spot metering zoner would place exposure.
What is truly interesting to me to see the effect of the entrenched system (reflective spot metering) on the implementation of incident metering systems. How we get hobbled having to use the old language, metaphors, and maths.
For example "Add 5 to the difference to obtain your SBR" converts the incident readings back into spot metering numbers so that they fit into the old established ZS equations.
Another example is the messing with the meter's EI number in the middle of taking your readings for a shot. A simpler, and IMO more understandable way to bias the exposure the direction the BTZS wants us to go is to duplex a shadow reading and a normal readings. It's essentially Dunn and Wakefield's duplexing for slides, revamped for negatives.