markbarendt
Member
moodlover,
Here's some reference info on incident metering, (there was a url link here which no longer exists)
The other thought I wanted to bring up, and the reason for my questions above, is that when using negative film (any negative film): there is no direct/absolute/perfect/specific/exact connection between camera exposure and the print we make from it.
Negatives are only truly underexposed when the shadow detail you expect to print isn't printable. If the shadow you want can be printed nicely (while ignoring the rest of the print) then the negative is not underexposed (that is not to say there aren't other problems to deal with).
Negatives are simply "an intermediary storage device" and there is typically plenty of "extra information" (shadow and highlight) available to us on most negatives that are shot at box speed and where an incident meter was used as you describe.
It is in my experience quite rare to print the entire range of tones typically caught on any negative. For example I can typically make prints that are essentially indistinguishable from each other from negatives that were shot from 1-stop under to 2-stops over. I have tested that on T-max 400, Delta 100 & 400, HP5, Tri-X, FP4, Portra, Superia, ...
The big difference between the preferences for camera exposure you see in the responses above, are personal. They are real but based on differences in the subject matter, style, and taste of the individual.
Assuming your kit is in good repair, using you incident meter as you described should result in well exposed films every time, period. If it doesn't something in your kit may be broken, or you may have a style that needs a different meter setting.
The only way you are going to figure this out is to bump the limits. Experiment with 800, 1600, and 50 for your T-max 400, develop normally (for 400) then print them. Adjust accordingly to your results.
Here's some reference info on incident metering, (there was a url link here which no longer exists)
The other thought I wanted to bring up, and the reason for my questions above, is that when using negative film (any negative film): there is no direct/absolute/perfect/specific/exact connection between camera exposure and the print we make from it.
Negatives are only truly underexposed when the shadow detail you expect to print isn't printable. If the shadow you want can be printed nicely (while ignoring the rest of the print) then the negative is not underexposed (that is not to say there aren't other problems to deal with).
Negatives are simply "an intermediary storage device" and there is typically plenty of "extra information" (shadow and highlight) available to us on most negatives that are shot at box speed and where an incident meter was used as you describe.
It is in my experience quite rare to print the entire range of tones typically caught on any negative. For example I can typically make prints that are essentially indistinguishable from each other from negatives that were shot from 1-stop under to 2-stops over. I have tested that on T-max 400, Delta 100 & 400, HP5, Tri-X, FP4, Portra, Superia, ...
The big difference between the preferences for camera exposure you see in the responses above, are personal. They are real but based on differences in the subject matter, style, and taste of the individual.
Assuming your kit is in good repair, using you incident meter as you described should result in well exposed films every time, period. If it doesn't something in your kit may be broken, or you may have a style that needs a different meter setting.
The only way you are going to figure this out is to bump the limits. Experiment with 800, 1600, and 50 for your T-max 400, develop normally (for 400) then print them. Adjust accordingly to your results.