Nodda Duma
Subscriber
I'm hoping I can begin a discussion about the best methods to determine the ISO rating of a newly-made emulsion. When mixing a new emulsion, we always assume it is "about ISO 1, give or take". As we all know, this is a very rough approximation.
Let's say that we know how to determine ISO / ASA rating of film. Many of the examples I've seen involve devoting a full roll or most of a roll of 35mm film to the task. Determining ISO rating of home-made emulsion, I think, is a little trickier because a) the plate cameras we use have no meters, b) the ISO is so low that normal charts don't help us much, and c) the labor and economy of DIY emulsion motivates one to search for a method that uses perhaps one or two plates. That is, some method a bit more scientific than the trial and error method of evaluating the scene of a developed plate and adjusting exposure if it's under- or over-exposed by some unknown number of stops.
I made an attempt today to measure the ISO of Batch 2 -- my second emulsion mix after the batch I mixed back in the fall. It was sunny and pleasant day outside, I had the day off, and I could thus take advantage of the Sunny 16 rule. I also have a gray card (18% gray) and a white poster. I set those up in sunlight, so that the gray card and white poster each filled half the frame. I then exposed sections of the plate similar to what you do in a darkroom under the enlarger when determining the proper exposure for a good print.
Developing this plate, I evaluated the densities and determined this emulsion batch is running at about ISO 0.5. The deduction involved calculating EV based on the shutter time corresponding to best density, and then using the EV equations to back out S in EV(S) = EV(100) + log2(S/100). A couple of test shots indicate I might actually be close to the actual ISO rating.
So this method seemed to work. However, I'm not even going to get into how "...I evaluated the densities and determined...". Suffice to say it involved a scanner and leaning heavily on my image processing background as an optical engineer to remove the effect of the scanner itself (I assume "scanner" is not off-topic for this subject as it was used as a evaluation tool and not used as part of a photographic process per se). Very susceptible to GIGO.
Please feel free to point out issues with my method. I'd be curious to know how emulsion sensitivity was evaluated originally -- i.e. at the turn of the 20th century, before densitometers were available but yet they would have used the scientific method -- or at least a better method which is less reliant on suspect methods such as scanning and compensating for the gamma curve. Any reference texts I can review?
For reference, here is an example image from today's testing. The top half is the white sheet, and bottom is the gray scale card. f/# was set to f/45, and each strip is increasingly exposed in 1 second increments (1 second on far right, through to 11 seconds on the left).
Let's say that we know how to determine ISO / ASA rating of film. Many of the examples I've seen involve devoting a full roll or most of a roll of 35mm film to the task. Determining ISO rating of home-made emulsion, I think, is a little trickier because a) the plate cameras we use have no meters, b) the ISO is so low that normal charts don't help us much, and c) the labor and economy of DIY emulsion motivates one to search for a method that uses perhaps one or two plates. That is, some method a bit more scientific than the trial and error method of evaluating the scene of a developed plate and adjusting exposure if it's under- or over-exposed by some unknown number of stops.
I made an attempt today to measure the ISO of Batch 2 -- my second emulsion mix after the batch I mixed back in the fall. It was sunny and pleasant day outside, I had the day off, and I could thus take advantage of the Sunny 16 rule. I also have a gray card (18% gray) and a white poster. I set those up in sunlight, so that the gray card and white poster each filled half the frame. I then exposed sections of the plate similar to what you do in a darkroom under the enlarger when determining the proper exposure for a good print.
Developing this plate, I evaluated the densities and determined this emulsion batch is running at about ISO 0.5. The deduction involved calculating EV based on the shutter time corresponding to best density, and then using the EV equations to back out S in EV(S) = EV(100) + log2(S/100). A couple of test shots indicate I might actually be close to the actual ISO rating.
So this method seemed to work. However, I'm not even going to get into how "...I evaluated the densities and determined...". Suffice to say it involved a scanner and leaning heavily on my image processing background as an optical engineer to remove the effect of the scanner itself (I assume "scanner" is not off-topic for this subject as it was used as a evaluation tool and not used as part of a photographic process per se). Very susceptible to GIGO.
Please feel free to point out issues with my method. I'd be curious to know how emulsion sensitivity was evaluated originally -- i.e. at the turn of the 20th century, before densitometers were available but yet they would have used the scientific method -- or at least a better method which is less reliant on suspect methods such as scanning and compensating for the gamma curve. Any reference texts I can review?
For reference, here is an example image from today's testing. The top half is the white sheet, and bottom is the gray scale card. f/# was set to f/45, and each strip is increasingly exposed in 1 second increments (1 second on far right, through to 11 seconds on the left).
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