Juan Valdenebro
Member
How would you describe -briefly- a system that works for different contrast scenes mixed in the same roll? Not for scanning, but for darkroom printing…
Let me explain. For many years I found incident metering under direct sunlight worked perfectly for slide film, as well as sunny f/16 rule, but as both produced underexposure for B&W film, my system -for sun- was simply testing beforehand, and then just writing notes down and knowing which f-stop and speed were right for common strong sunlight. Of course with some variations for every scene because even if sunlight is more or less the same, shadows do vary…
Some weeks ago Photrio forum member Lachlan Young taught me the right way of thinking, again for direct sunlight, was relating sunny exposures to the shadows, and not to direct sunlight… I was shocked! Instantly it seemed right to me before trying it, because my own values were several stops far from direct sunlight metering, so closer to shadows values, and it also made sense because incident metering works very well for soft light, so, metering the soft light areas in sunny scenes -the areas of shadows- would then be part of the same type of metering in the same soft type of light…
Immediately after reading Lachlan’s words I read -maybe Photrio forum member Matt King- about B&W film being designed precisely to allow photographers use the same roll of film for soft and harsh scenes, printing them perfectly with different MG filters… I used to think that was not a good option… When I was 20 in the 90’s I first learnt with the AA books, so my mind grew up believing that was not possible: I guess the old master had in mind the materials of his youth, but MG papers of today are amazing…
After Lachlan’s and Matt’s words I thought: if that is possible, it would seem that my mind map has been kind of very very wrong: I had always imagined film required shorter and longer development times that were strongly different for sun and overcast… So, if as Matt said, a middle point both in development and in EI was a real possibility, it would only be true if short and long development times for high and normal contrast were not as far one from another as my mind map had thought for many years…
So I took my recent years development notes, and tried to see if those two types of development for different contrast scenes, for the same film, were possibly not as different as I had always imagined… It wasn’t easy because my notes showed all kinds of very different times collected through years, and my notes were never organized per film: it was all mixed, but then I saw what made my mind clear: there was a Tri-X time for overcast, 11 minutes, and in another part of my notebook I found another Tri-X time, for direct sunlight, and it was 11 minutes too, so I turned back my pages anxiously looking for the previous 11 minutes page, thinking: these two times MUST have -for sure- very different temperature to be able to do those two very different types of develoment using both of them 11 minutes… Then, I saw both times were not only equal, but they also showed exactly the same temperature! I was amazed!
The only differences between my own optimal time for overcast, and my own optimal time for sun, was that the soft light one was EI500 1+1, 4 inversions per minute, while the sunny scenes required EI320 1+1.5, 2 inversions per minute… Not too different! All my life I had wrongly imagined both things were a lot more distant! Both procedures were indeed close!
Then I suddenly was a believer; I thought: then it’s true using a middle point EI (400) and also in between dilution and agitation, it is indeed possible that MG filters take good care of both type of scenes even if they receive the same development…
Sorry for the long explanation.
Of course I went out and started tests with a whole new mind, respecting good old box speed for the first time… My incident metering for soft light was already fine, so I was interested mostly in sunny scenes. I decided to test placing shadows in a bracketing style… It’s often said place shadows in zone 3, so I placed them at half-stop increments from zone 2 to zone 5, just in case… Darkroom contact prints showed me -with filter 2- my shadows were close to what I like, clean, when placed not in zone 3 but in zone 4, but I really liked them when placed in zone 5! If I place shadows in zone 3, there’s detail for sure, but they’re dark… Placing shadows in zone 5, places highlights too high for contrasty scenes, and that requires too short development times, what tends to produce softish tonal separation apart from easily blocked highlights...
Then I remembered I once read (Matt King again?) something like “some photographers don’t want to accept we really need to burn in highlights if we want decent tonal separation…”
So, having in mind mixed scenes in the same roll, how would you describe your own general system if you needed to teach a group of young students, and in particular, how do you meter under direct sunlight, and where do you place shadows? Do you meter at box speed for mixed scenes? Have you found a system that's good for direct prints, or do you burn highlights all the time when you print sunny scenes?
Thanks a lot for your comments!
Let me explain. For many years I found incident metering under direct sunlight worked perfectly for slide film, as well as sunny f/16 rule, but as both produced underexposure for B&W film, my system -for sun- was simply testing beforehand, and then just writing notes down and knowing which f-stop and speed were right for common strong sunlight. Of course with some variations for every scene because even if sunlight is more or less the same, shadows do vary…
Some weeks ago Photrio forum member Lachlan Young taught me the right way of thinking, again for direct sunlight, was relating sunny exposures to the shadows, and not to direct sunlight… I was shocked! Instantly it seemed right to me before trying it, because my own values were several stops far from direct sunlight metering, so closer to shadows values, and it also made sense because incident metering works very well for soft light, so, metering the soft light areas in sunny scenes -the areas of shadows- would then be part of the same type of metering in the same soft type of light…
Immediately after reading Lachlan’s words I read -maybe Photrio forum member Matt King- about B&W film being designed precisely to allow photographers use the same roll of film for soft and harsh scenes, printing them perfectly with different MG filters… I used to think that was not a good option… When I was 20 in the 90’s I first learnt with the AA books, so my mind grew up believing that was not possible: I guess the old master had in mind the materials of his youth, but MG papers of today are amazing…
After Lachlan’s and Matt’s words I thought: if that is possible, it would seem that my mind map has been kind of very very wrong: I had always imagined film required shorter and longer development times that were strongly different for sun and overcast… So, if as Matt said, a middle point both in development and in EI was a real possibility, it would only be true if short and long development times for high and normal contrast were not as far one from another as my mind map had thought for many years…
So I took my recent years development notes, and tried to see if those two types of development for different contrast scenes, for the same film, were possibly not as different as I had always imagined… It wasn’t easy because my notes showed all kinds of very different times collected through years, and my notes were never organized per film: it was all mixed, but then I saw what made my mind clear: there was a Tri-X time for overcast, 11 minutes, and in another part of my notebook I found another Tri-X time, for direct sunlight, and it was 11 minutes too, so I turned back my pages anxiously looking for the previous 11 minutes page, thinking: these two times MUST have -for sure- very different temperature to be able to do those two very different types of develoment using both of them 11 minutes… Then, I saw both times were not only equal, but they also showed exactly the same temperature! I was amazed!
The only differences between my own optimal time for overcast, and my own optimal time for sun, was that the soft light one was EI500 1+1, 4 inversions per minute, while the sunny scenes required EI320 1+1.5, 2 inversions per minute… Not too different! All my life I had wrongly imagined both things were a lot more distant! Both procedures were indeed close!
Then I suddenly was a believer; I thought: then it’s true using a middle point EI (400) and also in between dilution and agitation, it is indeed possible that MG filters take good care of both type of scenes even if they receive the same development…
Sorry for the long explanation.
Of course I went out and started tests with a whole new mind, respecting good old box speed for the first time… My incident metering for soft light was already fine, so I was interested mostly in sunny scenes. I decided to test placing shadows in a bracketing style… It’s often said place shadows in zone 3, so I placed them at half-stop increments from zone 2 to zone 5, just in case… Darkroom contact prints showed me -with filter 2- my shadows were close to what I like, clean, when placed not in zone 3 but in zone 4, but I really liked them when placed in zone 5! If I place shadows in zone 3, there’s detail for sure, but they’re dark… Placing shadows in zone 5, places highlights too high for contrasty scenes, and that requires too short development times, what tends to produce softish tonal separation apart from easily blocked highlights...
Then I remembered I once read (Matt King again?) something like “some photographers don’t want to accept we really need to burn in highlights if we want decent tonal separation…”
So, having in mind mixed scenes in the same roll, how would you describe your own general system if you needed to teach a group of young students, and in particular, how do you meter under direct sunlight, and where do you place shadows? Do you meter at box speed for mixed scenes? Have you found a system that's good for direct prints, or do you burn highlights all the time when you print sunny scenes?
Thanks a lot for your comments!
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