pierods
Member
- Joined
- Dec 18, 2007
- Messages
- 376
- Format
- 35mm
After examining photos from 200+ rolls I shot, first with Nikon and after the obligatory pilgrimage to the Church of our Lady of the Red Dot, I developed a hyphothesis for which I would like an opinion from photographers that have many, many more rolls than I do under their belts.
It's common knowledge that (negative) film is very forgiving of bad exposure. I would like to change this to "Negative film, black and white or color is very forgiving of bad exposure, AT THE PRICE OF SHARPNESS/CRITICAL SHARPNESS".
When going through my photos, I noticed that the sharpest ones also had impeccable exposure, while the rest suffered from either imperfect exposure and/or shutter speeds too low for the focal length used.
The photos that were critically sharp showed no difference with the (correctly exposed) photos taken with the Holy Red Dot Cameras (Red dot owners - they are fantastic cameras and I praise them),
Care to comment?
Thanks.
It's common knowledge that (negative) film is very forgiving of bad exposure. I would like to change this to "Negative film, black and white or color is very forgiving of bad exposure, AT THE PRICE OF SHARPNESS/CRITICAL SHARPNESS".
When going through my photos, I noticed that the sharpest ones also had impeccable exposure, while the rest suffered from either imperfect exposure and/or shutter speeds too low for the focal length used.
The photos that were critically sharp showed no difference with the (correctly exposed) photos taken with the Holy Red Dot Cameras (Red dot owners - they are fantastic cameras and I praise them),
Care to comment?
Thanks.