Let’s face it… the guy was a great photographer and a great self promoter. He loved to share his knowledge and loved to tell stories. To be honest, it really doesn’t matter how much is fact, fiction, or slightly embellished. Being a “bullshitter” is a charming attribute… and he was a very charming man!Is this AA moon metering fake news to appeal to the photographic technocrats?
But the Weston meter dial was not in c/ft2, it was in foot-candles! Low: 2 to 50, High: 25 to 1,600 foot candles, as I stated earlier in post 19He knew how that amount of luminance translated to settings on his camera, because he used Weston meters that gave readings in c/ft2, and because he had used the dial on the meter enough to remember what combination of aperture and shutter speed worked with 250 c/ft2 and the film he was using....
The most esoteric part of this is that AA remembered the luminance of the moon. The rest is just particular to the units of luminance he was comfortable using.
Let’s face it… the guy was a great photographer and a great self promoter. He loved to share his knowledge and loved to tell stories. To be honest, it really doesn’t matter how much is fact, fiction, or slightly embellished. Being a “bullshitter” is a charming attribute… and he was a very charming man!
The Weston meter reads in Cd/ft^2 and AA is very familiar with this type of measurement. He called it foot candle but that is a misnomer because foot candle is a illuminance measurement which AA never used. He only dealt with luminance. His formula that he liked to use requires to know the lumance of subjects in Cd/ft^2 and thus he knew the values for various things by heart.Being a "bullshiter" is a charming attribute? The name Trump comes to mind!
No matter… conversion of units isn’t exactly a black art.
But I’m pretty sure that Weston III, at least, reads in Cd/sqFt. Ironically… the manual doesn’t state what the units are. Nor does the Westin IV manual.
update…. The Weston Master II manual specifies, on page 1, “candles per square foot”.
Where did you learn all of this? The thing that surprises me the most about analogic photography is that there is so much to learn. But i dont where to find all of this info XD
I think that's 5 revolutionsThe Weston meter reads in Cd/ft^2 and AA is very familiar with this type of measurement. He called it foot candle but that is a misnomer because foot candle is a illuminance measurement which AA never used. He only dealt with luminance. His formula that he liked to use requires to know the lumance of subjects in Cd/ft^2 and thus he knew the values for various things by heart.
That is correct but AA in his book often called the unit Foot Candle which is the incorrect term.The scales on the Weston Master II actually read in foot candles per square foot (a measure of luminance), not foot candles (a measure of light source intensity). There is a conversion utility built into the dial which allows you to take incident readings and convert the foot candles per square foot readings into foot candles. The Ollinger description mis-speaks, because foot candles makes no sense in a reflected light meter.
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If there is a conversion on the dial I'm not aware of it. Would love to learn something new about these old meters, though. (I still use my Weston IIIs on a regular basis.) I know in the Master V manual there is a conversion table, which was not in the prior versions.
That is correct but AA in his book often called the unit Foot Candle which is the incorrect term.
If you want to measure foot.candle you have to convert the meter to incident meter. He can't get the reading off the moon he knew it. He never measured it I don't think so.That illustration of the manual is convincing, candles/square foot. Information I previously used was provided in http://www.jollinger.com/photo/meters/other/weston-article.html
" On the Universal the ranges are Low: 2 to 50, High: 25 to 1,600 foot candles." appears to have gotten units wrong.
This article identifies the confusion and inconsistency. https://www.westonmeters.info/light-units
"Weston light meters, including the luminance as well as exposure meters, are not consistent in the units that appear at the end of the needle pointer when it moves in response to the light. Once you attempt to compare one meter model with another it gets confusing. Indeed, even within one model - such as the S85 - the units can differ. So what do there different units spread across the scale amount to?Apologies for the earlier contradiction, Brian. All prior posts claiming foot-candles have noted retraction.
"I have made some attempt here to understand and explain them (with the help of Wikipedia). I hope I've got it right. If any reader of this page can contribute to or correct the information, I would appreciate it. - So here goes:
"Although not actually mentioned on the majority of Weston exposure meters, the unit in most common use is candles per square foot, or Candles/Ftsq. This is NOT the same as foot-candles although the simple relationship between the two terms means that a Weston meter can be used to convert between them. Early Weston light meters call this 'Light Values'. On the Master series, just the term 'Light' is most commonly used."
Yet an illustration of two luminance meters shows very clearly Footcandles on the dialface of models 703 and S85.
But given that these were not narrow angle spotmeters, how did AA get a reading of 250 c/ft2 ?!
Oh sure! But really his formula and his knowledge of the moon luminance isn't all that good for him. I am sure if he could redo the shot he would use a different exposure very like significantly more exposure.So what? People liked the photograph enough to buy prints from him. Mission accomplished.
He probably took earlier photographs with the moon visible in the sky, and therefore had experience with what works.But given that these were not narrow angle spotmeters, how did AA get a reading of 250 c/ft2 ?!
He would know the illuminance at the moon surface which is approximately the same as on earth but he wouldn't know the luminance unless he also know the reflectance of the moon surface.He didn't take a measurement off the moon. He knew what the surface brightness of the moon was, because the moon is in full daylight. There may have been elaborations to the legend over the years ("This is the West, sir. When the legend becomes fact, print the legend.") But the basic idea is, he guessed the exposure for the sunlit moon using prior knowledge, and hoped/figured that the foreground in the setting sun's light would turn out.
I've seen a couple of different prints of this image at the Center for Creative Photography, and IIRC the way it was printed got more dramatic from early to late versions. It also required a fair amount of dodging/burning to get the image onto the paper the way he visualized it.
He would know the illuminance at the moon surface which is approximately the same as on earth but he wouldn't know the luminance unless he also know the reflectance of the moon surface.
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