wiltw
Subscriber
You can simplify and not employ the ENTIRE concept of the Zone System, and yet a Spotmeter will indeed be very handy
A spotmeter plays a more significant role in the Zone System when you need to read the brightest area vs. the darkest area, to determine the brightness range of a scene, and if that range is too wide to ordinarily fit within what film can capture, you can then adjust exposure AND adjust the developing to compress/expand the brightness of the scene to better fit into what can be captured by the film being used. But you do NOT need to use the entire Zone System concept simply to employ principles of exposure in which you decide at assess the scene more methodically (without adjusting processing later)
- Pick a point in the scene that YOU wish to appear as 'mid-tone' in the final print
- Point your spotmeter at that point, and the suggested exposure will tell you to make THAT point middle tone (think '18% gray')
- Process your film normally, without changing chemistry temp or time from standard suggested 68 degree developer time
A spotmeter plays a more significant role in the Zone System when you need to read the brightest area vs. the darkest area, to determine the brightness range of a scene, and if that range is too wide to ordinarily fit within what film can capture, you can then adjust exposure AND adjust the developing to compress/expand the brightness of the scene to better fit into what can be captured by the film being used. But you do NOT need to use the entire Zone System concept simply to employ principles of exposure in which you decide at assess the scene more methodically (without adjusting processing later)
For example, in shooting product shots in the studio, I would use the spotmeter to assess the brightest and darkest areas of the scene in which I wanted to retail visible detail, and adjust my lighting so that the two would fall within the (compressed) range of tones that could be printed in a brochure by an offset press...and I was shooting color transparency, (not B&W film) and I was sending the shots to a pro lab for standard processing.
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