Stephen Benskin
Member
What makes people confident that their testing method is yielding reliable results?
What makes people confident that their testing method is yielding reliable results?
Sorry to bring up a new argument in the conclusion... But the first debate I won in high school was because I had a suprise argument.
The Delta-X Criterion, which I use for my own speed determination (so I subscribe to it but I want to explain something)... is based on the agreement that 0.3 Gradient is the appropriate speed point... Based on the study of The First Excellent Print.
Zone System speeds are NOT based on the study of the The First Excellent Print. So there is no reason except coincidence that the speeds even closely relate.
The First Excellent Print is based on people who viewed prints and pointed to the ones they liked. Built into this study is a Standard Observer's Opinion that "some" of the shadow detail is not important.
The biggest difference between this and the Zone System is... You will never hear anyone who uses the Zone System saying that shadows are not important.
... It's a very common misunderstanding. Film speed isn't determined by density because negative density by it self isn't relative to print quality. Film speed is determined by gradient. The fixed density of the ISO standard is a short cut to determining the fractional gradient point. As per Nelson, the fixed density method is only accurate when the contrast falls within the ISO contrast parameters. Otherwise you need to plug ΔD and Δlog-H into the Delta-X equation because with increased and decreased negative development, the fixed density method is less accurate. You're probably conflating it with how an increase in film density usually is accompanied by a higher gradient. This isn't always the case and definitely not to the same degree in different film types. This is all explained in Simple Methods of Determining the Fractional Gradient Speeds of Photographic Materials by C.N. Nelson and J.L. Simonds. If the OP really wants to understand what the REAL ISO is about, this is the paper.
As for a personal EI, whatever makes you happy.
The statement that very manufacturer deciding for themselves what the contrast for the standard should be is patiently wrong. The contrast parameters are clearly defined in the standard. Any variation and the ISO prefix cannot be used.
Sorry shadows are not important if you are shooting slides.
Well, I wouldn't put it that absolutely. I don't think that Dunn & Wakefield or others say that shadows aren't important.
What I might suggest is that with slides, that there are physical limits to what can be in the final artifact and that "we" need to decide what is most important.
The testing Dunn & Wakefield used does show that most people find mid-tones and highlights more important but we do well to remember that we don't have to conform.
Stephen,
Obviously I'm working from an over-simplified model and using the terminology imprecisely...
But, for the sake of clarification, when I develop, say N-2 in order to accommodate a rather high subject brightness range, am I not changing the gradient and therefore the effective speed of the film? Or would you say that this is outside the parameters of ISO testing standards and simply does not apply?
If the latter, then what would you call the E.I. I need to use for N-2, simply E.I.? Is that not somehow "film speed" as well? "Effective speed" maybe?
...
And, although I'll more than grant you the point that ISO is a strict and reliable value arrived at by rigorous methods, I still find a bit of a disconnect about how it is practically applied. Certainly, you would not advocate my using the film ISO as my basis for metering for an N-2 negative... or when using a developer that is known to not deliver full ISO speed. Or would you?
...
Doremus
Well ok I'll give you subjective but I've never had a bride who liked her wedding dress other then right on the edge of burnt out on the projector screen.
They never liked the 1/2 stop bracket if it was darker.
Kchrome 25 was nice film.
The grooms never minded or never said.
Sorry shadows are not important if you are shooting slides.
If you are shooting negatives if you get zone 1 below the halide fog it is not present so no detail.
If zone1 is into the toe it will be more difficult to print unless you like dark prints with compressed shadows.
Until 1960 the box speed had a safety factor of 2.5 stops, post 1960 this was reduced to 1.5.
Bill kind of misrepresented the first excellent print test. I'll go into more details later.
Xmas, the safety factor pre 1960 standards was 2.5 times, not stops. Afterward it was 1.2 times. You can read about it in Safety Factors in Camera Exposure that I've uploaded.
Hi Stephen
Thanks, so in round terms there is not a safety factor in the ISO any more, or maybe 1/3 of a stop, given the ISO quantization.
Noel
Just for giggles can we have some context for that rating.
Developer?
In comparison to manufacture's specs are you using minus development, stand...?
Are you "zoning"? If so details?
Subject matter?
Spot meter or incident?
Are you using old Petzvals or newish multicoated lenses?
Is part of that rating a safety factor?
My intent here is not to put you on the spot c6h6o3, but to help marciofs understand how you made your choice and at least some of considerations that go into the decision.
My point, both here and in the post you responded to, is that your film rating is an independent variable. "Expose for the shadows". Once you do that it's development that determines everything else about your negative. The old saw is "Develop for the highlights". But I develop for highlights, overall contrast, microcontrast in the midtones, all kinds of things depending upon what kind of negative I'm after.
So I reiterate: The correct film speed is whatever gives you sufficient shadow detail in your prints.
Pretty much. The third of a stop is basically comes from factoring flare into the exposure. It's easy to think that the 1/3 stop comes from the speed equation being 0.80 / Hm instead of 1 / Hm, but it doesn't. This is in Safety Factors also.
Sorry to bring up a new argument in the conclusion... But the first debate I won in high school was because I had a suprise argument.
The Delta-X Criterion, which I use for my own speed determination (so I subscribe to it but I want to explain something)... is based on the agreement that 0.3 Gradient is the appropriate speed point... Based on the study of The First Excellent Print.
Zone System speeds are NOT based on the study of the The First Excellent Print. So there is no reason except coincidence that the speeds even closely relate.
The First Excellent Print is based on people who viewed prints and pointed to the ones they liked. Built into this study is a Standard Observer's Opinion that "some" of the shadow detail is not important.
The biggest difference between this and the Zone System is... You will never hear anyone who uses the Zone System saying that shadows are not important.
And, although I'll more than grant you the point that ISO is a strict and reliable value arrived at by rigorous methods, I still find a bit of a disconnect about how it is practically applied.
Last page (part 2) of Simple Methods for Approximating the Fractional Gradient Speeds of Photographic Materials.
View attachment 87257
I love the "First Excellent Print" study and I did not mean it any ill will when I accused it of saying some shadow is unimportant - that's just my take. I figure since it puts you down on the toe a bit where there's little separation - and when you print, the paper curve is also in its shoulder where there is little separation - you get double compression. But it looks good to viewers. And what looks good is EXTREMELY important, it's a great baseline for the ISO standard.
Zone System, on the other hand, stresses an educational approach to illustrate the principle "expose for the shadows and develop for the highlights." This is a fundamental principle, but it leaves Zone System on the rejected side of the standards because its aims are arbitrary, based on a point where you can see separation of tone in the shadows on the print.
They are two different ways of deciding the minimum exposure.
The "First Excellent Print" method: Minimum is the least where the whole print looks excellent.
The "Zone System" method: Minimum is the least where you can see detail in the shadow.
I amuse myself exploring these two different definitions of quality, and I am not surprised they result in different speed ratings for the same emulsion.
Looks like I am wrong to associate Print Judgment Speed with 0.3G speed. This compares them as three different criteria.
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