John Irvine
Member
In the woods around our house, there are a number of different fungi that I think are interesting enough to make a decent picture. I have been unable to figure out how to get a good exposue under the trees. The conditions are a bright sunny day. The woods are deep enough that there are no shadows except in the dappled spots of sun. The subjects are fan shaped fungus on decaying limbs or stumps. They are primarily shades of gray, in rings. The outer ring is white. The backgrounds are old wood in shades of brown and gray and/or brown leaves. In the latest failure, the spot meter readings range from 6.8 in a dark brown part of the tree to 9.4 for the lightest part of the fungus. That is getting as much of the outer ring as possible in the spot. In the same light, the palm of my hand was 9.2. I waited until there were no spots of sun in the area I was photographing. By experience I have found they are too bright to balance with rest of the picture.
Having tried a lot of different things in this situation, I set 9.2 for Zone VI and set the exposure. The film was TX 320 shot at 160. Development was N+1 in HC 110. The result was a generally muddled negative. I had visualized the outer white ring as white, with some detail (VII?) with the gray rings having sharp differences in shade. The background had about the detail I was looking far but is not as dark vs the subject as I would like.
I am at wits end, trying to get good exposures of things on the ground under the trees.
Having tried a lot of different things in this situation, I set 9.2 for Zone VI and set the exposure. The film was TX 320 shot at 160. Development was N+1 in HC 110. The result was a generally muddled negative. I had visualized the outer white ring as white, with some detail (VII?) with the gray rings having sharp differences in shade. The background had about the detail I was looking far but is not as dark vs the subject as I would like.
I am at wits end, trying to get good exposures of things on the ground under the trees.