pbromaghin
Subscriber
The Kodak Master PhotoGuide for Still Picturemaking is a wonderful little 3" x 4" booklet chock-full of photographic tips; guides; natural and flash exposure; Computers for Effective Aperture, Daylight, Existing, Floodlight, Fill-in exposure, and Depth of Field. It sold for $1.95 in 1965.
In the "Your Approach to Exposure" chapter, on page 3, regarding Unknown Conditions, it says:
"If the importance of the subject justifies it, make a bracketing series of 3 or 5 exposures, each 4 times the last, with the middle exposure the same as your estimate. In color photography, make each exposure twice that of the preceding one."
So, in 1965, the state of the art of bracketing was to do 5 B&W exposures over 8 stops or 5 color exposures over 4 stops.
Is this still the case? Do you bracket 2 stops each exposure, or only 1? Do you do 3 or 5 exposures? Do you do it differently for color and B&W?
In the "Your Approach to Exposure" chapter, on page 3, regarding Unknown Conditions, it says:
"If the importance of the subject justifies it, make a bracketing series of 3 or 5 exposures, each 4 times the last, with the middle exposure the same as your estimate. In color photography, make each exposure twice that of the preceding one."
So, in 1965, the state of the art of bracketing was to do 5 B&W exposures over 8 stops or 5 color exposures over 4 stops.
Is this still the case? Do you bracket 2 stops each exposure, or only 1? Do you do 3 or 5 exposures? Do you do it differently for color and B&W?