Stephen Benskin
Member
No, you can set the speed point at any density or zone you like. There is no need to set the speed point to 0.1D, in fact, I think there are several arguments against it. Toe shape and shadow compression to be one, the flare issue you mentioned being another.
Wow! Ralph, wake-up and read the post. I said the exact opposite from what you are implying I said. And please stop giving canned Photo 101 answers.
Okay, here's the argument for. Let's look at why .10 is the speed point. It isn't because it is the lowest usable density. It is used because at the contrast parameters of the ISO standard, the conditions match the fractional gradient conditions. So, the speeds will correspond with those produced by the fractional gradient method. It also guarantees that there is a consistent gradient for any film type. As Jones has pointed out, density has nothing to do with the determination of print quality. The determining factor is always gradient. In addition, any speed determination using 0.10 fixed density method when the development is outside the ISO parameters loses the correlation between the resulting speeds and the FG method, and thus the psychophysical testing results.
As with the FG method and the 0.10 fixed density method, the speed point isn't where the exposure is supposed to fall, but it is a dependable place to calculate speed from. The FG method used 1/E then divided the speed number by 4. While the FG's speed point for normal development is around one stop to the left of the 0.10 fixed density's speed point, the resulting speeds are not one stop faster but one stop slower. The Delta-X method which produces equivalent results as the FG method has adjusted the constant to produce the same results for the fixed density method at normal development.
From this, we can conclude that the most accurate and consistent method the determination of any alternative film speed would be to use one of the two methods with Delta-X being the most accurate and use a different constant. For the fixed density method, instead of using .8/H, you would use .6/Hm. Using an arbitrary density value to determine film speed without any knowledge of the local gradient introduces potential variation in the range of quality with the results do to different film characteristics. One film could respond. This argument can be used for any value that doesn't consider gradient. That is one of my arguments against ZS testing. Without considering how the speed method relates to directly with print quality you will only wind up with a less accurate rule of thumb. Simply using the 0.10 fixed density method and adding 1/2 stop more exposure is more accurate than picking an arbitrary density as speed point.
I want to be clear that this is an issue about speed determination and not exposure placement. The First Excellent Print test shows that quality is maintained for at least a two stop range of exposure over the first excellent print exposure. ASA speeds prior to 1960 were one stop faster than today. There's no question that there is a range of exposure that will still produce quality results (the degree is primarily dependent on format size). It's not like it's any great discovery.
Will giving more exposure than indicated using any method of speed determination place the exposure further up the curve? Yes. Does that increase the the gradient in the shadows? Yes. But the question comes down to a consistent method to accomplish it.
What are your arguments against 0.10 or the Delta-X/Fractional gradient methods.
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