Here's a question that's been keeping me busy for a while now. In a nutshell, what I'd like to know is: how long do I have to expose photographic material to light to obtain a certain amount of exposure -- if there's no optical system present, so the only thing I can adjust is exposure time (as opposed to the usual time and aperture)?
Every exposure value for a given film speed corresponds to an indefinite number of pairs of aperture and exposure time values:
EV 15 (ISO 100) -> [f/16; 1/125] etc.
Obviously, this is always assuming that there is an some kind of aperture to begin with (usually, a lens with a diaphragm). But we might as well expose our film or paper to our light source directly, without any aperture or optical system between the two. There's not many situations in which that's a sensible thing to do* -- but still: how would we, in such a situation, determine the correct exposure time? Say my incident meter gave me an EV 15, how long would I have to expose my material to the light to get the equivalent of an f/16; 1/125 exposure?
One of my attempts to answer that question involved my Bessa-R's TTL meter. With a 35/2.5 lens attached and set to maximum aperture, it gave me a reading 4.5 stops below the one I got with the lens taken off. So with EV 15 from the above example, I'd have to expose at either f/2.5; 1/4000, or take off the lens and expose for about 1/100000 sec to get the same result (a theoretical f/0.52). Can these 4.5 stops be considered a (rough) general rule? And if so, is it a coincidence that, in Zone System terms, going ›down‹ 4.5 stops from Zone V takes us right to the point between first discernible detail and no detail at all?
-- Nils
*) one of them would be trying to determine EFS by contact printing a step wedge using an enlarger as light source.
Every exposure value for a given film speed corresponds to an indefinite number of pairs of aperture and exposure time values:
EV 15 (ISO 100) -> [f/16; 1/125] etc.
Obviously, this is always assuming that there is an some kind of aperture to begin with (usually, a lens with a diaphragm). But we might as well expose our film or paper to our light source directly, without any aperture or optical system between the two. There's not many situations in which that's a sensible thing to do* -- but still: how would we, in such a situation, determine the correct exposure time? Say my incident meter gave me an EV 15, how long would I have to expose my material to the light to get the equivalent of an f/16; 1/125 exposure?
One of my attempts to answer that question involved my Bessa-R's TTL meter. With a 35/2.5 lens attached and set to maximum aperture, it gave me a reading 4.5 stops below the one I got with the lens taken off. So with EV 15 from the above example, I'd have to expose at either f/2.5; 1/4000, or take off the lens and expose for about 1/100000 sec to get the same result (a theoretical f/0.52). Can these 4.5 stops be considered a (rough) general rule? And if so, is it a coincidence that, in Zone System terms, going ›down‹ 4.5 stops from Zone V takes us right to the point between first discernible detail and no detail at all?
-- Nils
*) one of them would be trying to determine EFS by contact printing a step wedge using an enlarger as light source.
Last edited by a moderator:


