Thomas Bertilsson
Member
I think there are two scenarios here, and I always use incident metering:
1. The light is very bright and flat. It's sometimes difficult to 'read' the light but it comes with practice. I meter from the scene towards the camera lens, and then I judge the light. If it's super flat lighting I will underexpose the film by up to a stop, and then over-develop the film. This takes your shadow values lower, stretches out the mid-tones for good local contrast, and with the right agitation I can get enough zing to the highlights that it makes for an interesting print.
2. The light is very bright but there is also lots of contrast. Here I meter the same way, and depending on how much shadow detail I want I overexpose by up to two stops. I then process the negatives for a shorter amount of time and I also slow down agitation.
In both these scenarios I focus very hard on what makes the picture interesting, and I try to bring that forward in the scene. If it's a landscape I want to know what part of the landscape is most interesting and then emphasize the hell out of it. If it's a portrait, skin tones and eyes are obviously important, so we try to bring that out. The goal, for me, is always to have to manipulate as little as possible in the negative when I print.
This is also why I mainly use just one film and one developer (maybe two developers down the road when I graduate from the first one) - because it means less surprises in how the film behaves and responds to exposure and developing treatments.
I can say with confidence that I have learned how to find what's interesting about a scene - to me anyway - and that I know by instinct how I need to shoot it and subsequently process it in order to get the print that I want.
I don't think there's a secret recipe for this that covers all aspects of a photograph, but I do know that for the most part there's a certain range of tones I want to stand out, and usually those are in the high mid-tones to highlights. However I get there is a bit different each time, but the focal point is what makes it stand out.
And, you can make the focal point of the picture stand out either by emphasizing it, or suppressing the 'stuff' around it, or a combination of both. So we're dancing with light, moving the mid-tones up and down the tonal scale like a yo-yo. Sometimes that means less shadow detail, sometimes that means purposely blocked up highlights. Whatever it takes to bring the picture forward. Show what the picture is about.
I should add that I'm not successful every time. Of course I'm not. But it gets me closer with every roll that I experience.
I don't know if that helps or not.
- Thomas
1. The light is very bright and flat. It's sometimes difficult to 'read' the light but it comes with practice. I meter from the scene towards the camera lens, and then I judge the light. If it's super flat lighting I will underexpose the film by up to a stop, and then over-develop the film. This takes your shadow values lower, stretches out the mid-tones for good local contrast, and with the right agitation I can get enough zing to the highlights that it makes for an interesting print.
2. The light is very bright but there is also lots of contrast. Here I meter the same way, and depending on how much shadow detail I want I overexpose by up to two stops. I then process the negatives for a shorter amount of time and I also slow down agitation.
In both these scenarios I focus very hard on what makes the picture interesting, and I try to bring that forward in the scene. If it's a landscape I want to know what part of the landscape is most interesting and then emphasize the hell out of it. If it's a portrait, skin tones and eyes are obviously important, so we try to bring that out. The goal, for me, is always to have to manipulate as little as possible in the negative when I print.
This is also why I mainly use just one film and one developer (maybe two developers down the road when I graduate from the first one) - because it means less surprises in how the film behaves and responds to exposure and developing treatments.
I can say with confidence that I have learned how to find what's interesting about a scene - to me anyway - and that I know by instinct how I need to shoot it and subsequently process it in order to get the print that I want.
I don't think there's a secret recipe for this that covers all aspects of a photograph, but I do know that for the most part there's a certain range of tones I want to stand out, and usually those are in the high mid-tones to highlights. However I get there is a bit different each time, but the focal point is what makes it stand out.
And, you can make the focal point of the picture stand out either by emphasizing it, or suppressing the 'stuff' around it, or a combination of both. So we're dancing with light, moving the mid-tones up and down the tonal scale like a yo-yo. Sometimes that means less shadow detail, sometimes that means purposely blocked up highlights. Whatever it takes to bring the picture forward. Show what the picture is about.
I should add that I'm not successful every time. Of course I'm not. But it gets me closer with every roll that I experience.
I don't know if that helps or not.
- Thomas