Hallo all,
I am sure this has been answered somewhere somehow but I could not find an answer. Now here is my problem.
I have been calibrating my film for a few years now using a similar method as Phil Davis.
Recently I read BTZS Edition 4 and I liked the idea of Phil Davis using an incident light meter to determine SBR and development.
Now the idea of doubling the film speed for the shadow light metering makes sense to me and using this method worked so far for me.
However I have not used it in a +1, or a +2 situation till now.
My thoughts are if you have a dull lighting situation and need a +2 development and use the doubled film speed you will in fact under expose the film by one stop. Since you have five SBR`s/zones being exposed on your negative and if you double the film speed the lowest zone will drop of into the flat part of the curve and will be lost.
Is this right or have I missed something somewhere?
As far as I am concerned the BTZS works where the SBR is 7 or more. However if the SBR is only 6 the film speed should only be multiplied by 1 1/2, and with 5 SBR the film should be exposed by the film speed determined during the film testing.
I would be grateful if someone could push me in the right direction.
Thanks.
I am sure this has been answered somewhere somehow but I could not find an answer. Now here is my problem.
I have been calibrating my film for a few years now using a similar method as Phil Davis.
Recently I read BTZS Edition 4 and I liked the idea of Phil Davis using an incident light meter to determine SBR and development.
Now the idea of doubling the film speed for the shadow light metering makes sense to me and using this method worked so far for me.
However I have not used it in a +1, or a +2 situation till now.
My thoughts are if you have a dull lighting situation and need a +2 development and use the doubled film speed you will in fact under expose the film by one stop. Since you have five SBR`s/zones being exposed on your negative and if you double the film speed the lowest zone will drop of into the flat part of the curve and will be lost.
Is this right or have I missed something somewhere?
As far as I am concerned the BTZS works where the SBR is 7 or more. However if the SBR is only 6 the film speed should only be multiplied by 1 1/2, and with 5 SBR the film should be exposed by the film speed determined during the film testing.
I would be grateful if someone could push me in the right direction.
Thanks.

