sanking
Member
Claire Senft said:I do get a bit confused with the way that you use the SBR terminology Sandy. Coirrect my thinking: SBR is BTZS Incident system terminology. An SBR of 5 is a flatly lit plane without any lighting variation. I get that impression that when you say SBR 5 that you are referring to 5 stops of difference in lighting ratios between lit and shadowed areas instead of no difference. I am no stickler for terminology but if each of us means something different when using the same term the communications of concepts and ideas can get quite muddled.
I also believe that SBR is a term that applies only to a scene.
Yes, SBR is indeed BTZS terminology that is based on and anticipates incident readings. SBR is not a corruption or misuse of the terms LSLR because they are not the same thing, though in some cases they may indicate the same or similar values. As has been pointed out before, a SBR reading is based on a reading of the intensity, or illuminance of the light that falls on the subject. LSLR is based on the brightness or luminosity of light reflected from the subject and is measured with a reflectance meter. Moreover, if you read carefully the pertinent sections in Beyond the Zone System it should be clear that SBR and SLR are not used to mean the same thing.
When I speak of the 5-stop range I do so within the context of the way Davis describes it, i.e. it is based on the presumption that the maximum subject luminance range of any object in a glare-free, shadow-free area, and that is evenly illuminated, is about five stops. SBR is a concept that ensues from his assumption that the subject luminance range can be estimated by adding the illuminance range (which is the difference between readings measured with an incident meter in the most brightly lit area of the scene and in the shadow areas of the scene) to the 5-stop luminance range. In other words, the SBR system of metering does not give us LSLR, but an estimate of it. In fact, it is impossible to directly measure LSLR with an incident meter at all.
My response to Kirk in the other thread offered a means of getting around the obvious fact that we can not directly measure SBR values below 5 when there is no difference in intensity in the light falling on the subject in different areas of the scene. The only way to do that is to fudge the issue by simulation.
At some place in Beyond the Zone System Davis mentions that he used the term SBR to avoid confusion with SLR, which was widely used at that time to mean a single lens reflex camera. Strictly speaking he did not need to make that clarification at all because SBR as he uses ther term is not the same as subject luminance range, or LSLR. The term SBR only has meaning within the specific reference of the BTZS system of exposure and development, which is built around the use of an incident meter and attempts to provide a fast and reliable method of *estimating* the subject luminance range.
In fact, to say that SBR is a corruption of NSLR is a contradiction in logic, for as Stephen Benskin correctly notes, subject luminance range can be measured with a spot meter. In fact, you can only assume the range with an incident meter. SBR is not NSLR. It is a term used with very precise meaning within the framework of a specific system or method for exposure and develoment. It incorporates some of the assumptions of NSLR but it is clearly not the same thing since, as I belive we all agree, it is impossible to measure NSLR directly with an incident meter since it is based on luminance readings. So, far from confusing terms, Davis shows much greater precision in the use of terminology than some of us contributing to this discussion, and I include myself, sadly, in the group.
Sandy
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