I couldn't disagree more. More time has been spent on the zone system to do just that. The c41 process intent is to standardise exposure, film and chemistry. It's just the screwups that have to be compensated for......
Sent from my Nexus 5 using Tapatalk
IMO Adams and the other zone system promoters tried to make shooting and printing simpler for the masses by creating a system. The zone system has been a true boon to photography, it inspired many and made photography accessible.
To a significant extent the zoners promoted the idea that there actually is one specific and correct exposure for each negative as well as a correct way for each and every negative to be developed. People like clear answers, singular answers, and the zone system provides that. Even so the ZS still incorporates print test strips at varying enlarger exposures, the connection between camera exposure and print exposure is a variable and the fix is built in to ZS teaching.
The zone system works well but it is a simplification, the zone system is essentially an industrial process standard, it is a description of one possible path to a great photo among the many paths that actually exist.
The zone system was developed in a world of fixed grade papers and films with shorter straight lines in their curves. It was also developed with certain biases such as minimizing grain. With traditional B&W minimizing exposure helps minimize grain, that bias was designed into the system. IMO the ZS film speed and metering teachings build in safeguards against probably the most prevalent mistake photographers make, underexposure. Those are very reasonable ideas to teach newbies, they are not so necessary for people with more experience or people using different systems.
The zone system is not a description of the science of photography.
Next:
The C-41 process standardized development of the film, not it's exposure.
Negative films, both C-41 and B&W, excel at dealing with camera exposure variations. Negative film's inherent exposure latitude is the technical basis that disposable cameras are designed specifically to exploit. This is one of those "many paths" that I talked about above. It is a different industrial standard, nothing more, nothing less. It is a standard that can still create great results and the reason I can make really cool photos with a Holga without worrying about setting exposure for every frame.
Typically negative films start reaching an exposure level that can create excellent prints at about 1 stop under box speed, that range continues to about 2 stops over box speed. A correct exposure for a negative can be anywhere in that range. Many times good prints can be had well outside that range too. One under to two over is what I would call the safe range.
One place C-41 films differ from B&W is in how grain presents itself. C-41 films typically present less grain when they get more exposure, not less. Maximizing exposure becomes the proper bias if one wants to minimize grain, exactly opposite of the ZS exposure bias.
The point I'm making is that letting exposure float isn't necessarily a screwup, for many it is a conscious creative choice well within the bounds of the science.