In low-light street scenes, I normally just use my mini tripod, use the normal EI, and let what movement there is be blurred as part of the image. I had avoided the push. But I have one roll that I needed to keep shorter exposure times and this led to questioning the subject. I realize this topic may end up more like a recipe than a formula,
I was thinking that the development compensation was aimed at the necessary increase to restore the high values. If you meter at V and expose for a IV value (-1), then all zones are dropped by one. The values above V can be restored to near normal values while values the below V will not be completely restored and the lowest will be lost. I have a densitometer, spreadsheets, and graphs; so I can see this effect.
While searching the topic, I have seen an assortment of “rules-of-thumbs” such as:
- “for 1 stop increase 1.5x, for 2 stops increase 2.25x, and for 3 stops increase 4.5x”
- “increase 50% for each stop of push (meaning if 6:00 is normal then increase to 9:00, 13:30, and 20:15)”
- “add 10%, then 20%, and 30% for traditional film and 5%, 10%, and 15% for T-grain film”
I also saw the issue declared as voodoo, which makes more sense the further one looks into it.
This doesn’t explain what is measured with these adjusted times. A quick survey of Ilford and Kodak information shows that Ilford recommends a much higher extension compared to Kodak (on average 1.25x, 1.74x, 2.58x verses 1.17x, 1.43x, 1.78x). I suppose one could shoot a test roll and develop snips at increasing longer times until the resulting prints are deemed unacceptable.
What I wanted to see is something that would be more like “increase development to achieve a .10D in the original Zone I-1/2” or “increase development to restore Zone VIII to the intended density without the push processing.” I was looking for a more objective type of statement.
I guess the question to someone would be: if you were given a film and a developer that has no published push times and asked to determine these times, what criteria would you use to judge the extended times?