xwhatsit
Member
- Joined
- Mar 16, 2010
- Messages
- 38
- Format
- 35mm RF
Hello,
I've got a Durst CNA-200 colour analyser I picked up for next to nothing. I think I've mostly figured it out, I've never used a colour meter before but it seems typical from what I can figure out from searching -- there's a knob on the front with a seconds readout, a Y/M/C selector, and there's three gangs of trimpots with a selector, which is presumably for different types of paper or something.
I want to use it for B&W. I hear some meters have a Density channel in addition to the Yellow, Magenta and Cyan, but this doesn't. My question is, given that I'm using VC paper, is it the cyan channel I should be using? Will the fact that it's only reading cyan light play tricks on me when I change contrast filters?
If the answer is standardising on a grade 2 filter or something while I measure things, then so be it.
If I'm going to use it for printing, I assume I should use it for measuring the brightest highlights? Then expose for the seconds the meter will read? And the contrast filters will therefore adjust the shadows.
Thanks for any assistance!
I've got a Durst CNA-200 colour analyser I picked up for next to nothing. I think I've mostly figured it out, I've never used a colour meter before but it seems typical from what I can figure out from searching -- there's a knob on the front with a seconds readout, a Y/M/C selector, and there's three gangs of trimpots with a selector, which is presumably for different types of paper or something.
I want to use it for B&W. I hear some meters have a Density channel in addition to the Yellow, Magenta and Cyan, but this doesn't. My question is, given that I'm using VC paper, is it the cyan channel I should be using? Will the fact that it's only reading cyan light play tricks on me when I change contrast filters?
If the answer is standardising on a grade 2 filter or something while I measure things, then so be it.
If I'm going to use it for printing, I assume I should use it for measuring the brightest highlights? Then expose for the seconds the meter will read? And the contrast filters will therefore adjust the shadows.
Thanks for any assistance!