sanking
Member
Stephen Benskin said:I look at BTZS as tone reproduction with some Zone terms. I can accept however you want to apply it. I can also respectfully disagree with it too. We can argue that Davis writes that "SBR" is his abbreviation for Subject Luminance Range, but what's the point? I think it's possible to communicate our ideas without coming to an agreement on terms.
I've place Naturalistic Photography for Students of the Arts on my reading list. Thanks for that.
As for the question:
Here's an interesting question. Except for special cirumstances, all scenes look best in a print when there is a full range of tones. Why can't we let a flat scene remain flat in the print (apart from artistic considerations)? It's flat in nature, why not the print?
Part of the reason is psychological. It falls under the heading of visual adaptation, and more precisely the area of lateral adaptation, and perhaps falls within simultaneous contrast. Every photographer has experienced at one time or another photographing a scene on an overcast day and being disappoint by the flat results. The scene looked fine when photographing it. What happen? For various survival purposes, it's important to be able to distinguish elements in a scene as clearly as possible. So our brain wants to adjust every scene so that it has as full of a range as possible. That's why the scene looked good to the photographer and came out flat on the film. And I believe that is why we want to see a print with the full range of tones.
Back to the topic of the thread. One of the images in the current issue of PHOTO Techniques required something new for me. The subject was the stone work in Peterborough Cathedral. The camera was pointed up toward the ceiling. Strong ambient light was coming in from a bank of windows and illuminating the lower columns, and the ceiling remained in shadows. The luminance range was around normal, but not only was the balance of tones not aesthetically pleasing, there was little tonal seperation in the stone work.
If I pushed the film, the tones on the lower columns would be increased further unbalancing the tones, and the local contrast in the stone work would change little. Masking was an option. I figured it would take approximately four or five seperate mask to accomplish the look I wanted. I needed to hold down the columns while I brought up the ceiling. I needed to increase the local contrast over the entire image with an additional increase in the ceiling. There were a few touches that could also be accomplished by bleaching.
I could either go the complicating masking route or try something different. I chose to go digital. Digital is just another tool. I had the negative scanned, worked on it in Photoshop (just using the tonal controls - no cutting and pasting) and then had it output on a negative. It now has the look I want and is almost capable of a straight silver print.
OK, I dont expect that you necessarily agree or disagree with me. I am just trying to make the point that the use of the term SBR is neither incorrect nor contrary to the language of sensitometry. It is simply a word used by Davis as part of his BTZS incident system of metering. Since LSLR can not be measured with an incident meter I wonder what term you would have preferred to describe what he means by SBR?
As to the other point, I certainly dont discount the role of psychological factors such as visual adaptation, lateral adaptation, and simultaneous contrast as part of the creative process of Emerson's photography, even though my first inclination would be to explain his style by more ubiquitous influences such as the sister arts and the influence of other contemporary artists, both painters and photographers. And, though I could make a very good case that his style was primarily influenced by contemporary artists, such as Whistler, there might be some information in Von Helmoltz's Physiological Optics that would tie in with your idea of psychological factors.
Sandy