This thread was originally about properly interpreting the results from two methodologies. How a test is interpreted is just as important as making the test, especially if the results are intended to be shared. Tone reproduction, Zone System, and other methods including simple trial and error, all endeavor toward the same goal: to match the scene to the printing material and establish a standard goal or normal. The difference between the various methods mostly has to do with the degree of control, repeatability, and communicating the results. As with most testing, the results will fall within a range. Because the final product of a photograph is subjective there is generally a greater range of acceptability. This has been both a saving grace for practioners and the cause for endless debate.
In the paper, Jones, L.A., and Nelson, C.N.,
Control of Photographic Printing: Improvement in Terminology and Further Analysis of Results, Journal of the Optical Society of America, V. 38, No. 11, 1948., Jones was evaluating the best approach to objectively determine sensitometrically the paper grade that will consistently produce high quality prints. Jones concluded, “
because of the influence of the brightness distribution and subject matter in the scenes photographed, an accurate prediction cannot always be made of the exposure scale (LER) of the paper which will give a first-choice print from a negative of known density scale (DR)… But what other course is there to follow? Either we must make the best of a somewhat imperfect relationship or face the prospect of having no criterion whatever for choosing the paper contrast grade.”
Even though matching the negative DR to the paper LER isn’t a perfect criterion, it is good enough to produce quality images in most situations, or at least with a slight contrast adjustment. Jones also found a few exceptions to the DR / LER criteria, “for the soft papers, the density scales of the negative (DR) should in most cases exceed the sensitometric exposure scale of the paper (LER), whereas, for the hard papers, the density scales of the negatives should in most cases be less than the sensitometric exposure scale of the paper (LER).” So, it's more about determining the middle of an acceptable range than nailing a precise value. As with table 2-4 from the previous post, the "desired density range of a negative usually suitable for each Log Exposure Range or Grade Number" is a range and not a specific value. Grade 2 for a diffusion enlarger is 0.95 - 1.14. Most often the stated LER for a grade of paper is the middle value which in this example is 1.05. If the aim is for an LER of 1.05 then the results most likely will work on a grade 2 paper in practice. However. these values also assume an understanding of what numbers actually represent. The paper LER doesn't refer to the full range of the paper from black to white. Nor does it mean this is the target density range for the negative, but only represents a portion in relation to the subject luminance range.
With that in mind, the following graph excellently illustrates Jones conclusions. The curve is a grade 2 paper curve. The horizontal lines represent the density ranges of negatives that produced first choice prints (best judged quality) when printed on the paper and where the ranges fell on the print. A necessary consideration has to do with the judging parameters. A realistic representative of a scene is different than a dramatic or abstract interpretation. All can be considered excellent in their own right, but fall outside the parameters of the test. For the record, the judges evaluated the photographs as to whether they were a good representative of how the judge believed the scene looked in real life. A realistic representation since this was the goal of the majority of photographs taken.