Phil Davis details this in his book BTZS. This Google search will show you various peoples experiences with that.So, I would like to try this test with my medium format film... However, my only controllable light source is my condenser enlarger. Is there a way to determine how long my exposure time (i.e., time the enlarger is switched on) for contact printing for a given enlarger height and lens aperture? I have a spot meter and a gray card, and for some reason that seems like all I should really need to determine a length of time for which to expose the film. But I'm clueless about how to determine a contact exposure time given a light meter's reading of f-stop and shutter speed.
Can anybody explain why Zone II is beginning at 0.17 and reassure me that 0.17 is actually a relative density measurement ?
The diagram clearly illustrates with two arrows (bottom arrow pointing up to B+F), the point selected is 0.17 above B+F.
With seven zones fitting in 1.2, each zone is 0.17 of density on film. Ralph positions Zone I so it is in the density range from B+F to 0.17.
Ralph may explain better but I think Zone I is "at" 0.09 and ranges from 0.00 to 0.17 thus Zone I 1/2 is conceptually the border between Zone I and II.
There are however two points which conflict with 0.17 being a relative measurement above B+F.
- In the Figure 4 above, the RHS column shows Zone II beginning at 0.17 rather than Zone 1.5
- All the density measurements done thus far for the spreadsheet and entered into the "Input Data" tab (fig 3 in Ralph's pdf) are absolute values, but in point 9. above, there is no mention that 0.17 is a relative value in the instructions.
Can anybody explain why Zone II is beginning at 0.17 and reassure me that 0.17 is actually a relative density measurement ?
For those that do not have a lot of other highly technical sources and refference material on hand, the concepts being addressed are found in The Negative. This text has often been criticized for representing "bubble gum" sensitometry, but if it was too overly technical, it would be criticized for that as well.
Just chiming in that this is mentioned in The Negative on page 52, although not as in great detail, but it doesn't have to be either. It states that the individual gray values produced at each zone are the midpoint of their respective zone.Bill pretty much answered question 1. The range for a zone is from -1/2 to +1/2 of that Zone with the Zone number falling in the middle.
As for the second question, its all relative with the film curve because apart from using Zones as a guide between the original subject and the paper curve, Zones have little relevance when it comes to the film curve. There simply isnt a fixed relationship between Zones and negative densities. The scene has a luminance range and camera exposure places it on the film curve. The key is to place the scenes values on a portion of the curve with a sufficient gradient to separate the tones on the print. Increasing or decreasing the exposure moves the entire illuminance range up or down the curve, but the luminance range of the scene remains the same.
Not disagreeing, this is also covered in the book very adequately IMO and without any unnecessary verbage on page 67-69 in the discussion of "subject contrast", specifically regarding the short-scale low contrast subject. The Chapter on the ZS covers these things, IMO, in practical and understandable terms, but not without some personal indeavor to "see" it. Regardless of how this stuff is discussed, either in a more simpler or complicated manner, it will never, IMO, be immediately obvious.
It clearly covers, IMO in the ZS chapter, that a subject luminance ratio, for example, of 8:1 remains 8:1 between any 4 zones on the log exposure scale, be it between Zone III and Zone VI or between Zone IV and Zone VII, between Zone V and Zone VIII, etc....
I wanted to share my latest version of the film testing spreadsheet. In summary I have made changes to permit the user to adjust their target density range. Ralph had defaulted it to 1.20 in many places (as he targets grade 2 paper in a diffusion enlarger). But because others will use condenser enlargers etc, I wanted to share my changes.I will finish documenting my film speed test results here.
If you feel your testing method is accurate, then you adjust the EI; however, it's not an absolute requirement.
Been looking at the spread sheet, the 21st or 31st step is shown as being the chemical fog density, but these are defined steps and clearly, at least from my tests, contain density both from exposure and chemical fog.
It's just an observation. I use a piece of black electrical tape in the middle between the rows of step densities to ensure there is an adequate section of the tablet that does not receive exposure from which to read just chemical fog density
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