I'm toying to my Shen-Hao 4x5 shooting some extreem closeup in our studio at work. In particular, I'm willing to test how my Clatar-II 90mm/6.8 will work on maximum closeup I can get with it which turns to obtain about 3:1 maginfication. I managed to focus at the distance of about 7-8cm with bellows almost fully extended (focused by back), now need to calculate bellows factor for exposure.
According to Steve Simmon's book, I have to square bellows extention value (measured by tape to be around 280mm from the shutter to the film plane) and then divide it on squared lens focal length thereby obtaining the necessary exposure correction in stops. Doing that for this particular case I get about 9.6 stops to add to the orginal exposure !!! (f/22@8) Can it be true ?!?! Sounds like I messed up with this approach...or this is likely to happen in such extreem closeups and magnifications ?
Thanks, Alex
According to Steve Simmon's book, I have to square bellows extention value (measured by tape to be around 280mm from the shutter to the film plane) and then divide it on squared lens focal length thereby obtaining the necessary exposure correction in stops. Doing that for this particular case I get about 9.6 stops to add to the orginal exposure !!! (f/22@8) Can it be true ?!?! Sounds like I messed up with this approach...or this is likely to happen in such extreem closeups and magnifications ?
Thanks, Alex