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- Jun 21, 2003
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in another thread making its way through its 5th page
a poster is asking questions about common issues that can happen
when exposing film and developing negatives ...
what is your way you expose a negative.
i know there are as many ways to expose a sheet or roll of film
as there are people with cameras .. but what do YOU do..
do you expose at box speed, ambient meter ( or sunny11 ) ?
do you have your own personal speed tailor made for the way you develop your film ?
do you expose for the shadows and let everything fall into place?
do you expose for the high notes and let everyrthing fall into place?
do you not worry about it and everything seems to work out?
or do you expose every sheet of film, every frame on a roll in a custom way
so you can slide the mid tones up and down the scale and get a negative you want, every time?
or do you rely on the camera's ability to expose the perfect negative ( like the yashica T4 was known to do )
some people spend a short amount of time doing tests, they find what works and don't worry about it
others spend more time doing tests and make their negatives effortlessly (or seemingly so because of experience behind the box or in the dark ) ..
and still others enter into the realm of densitometry and sensitonimetry and make perfect exposures by understanding exactly how everything works at
more of a scientific level ...
what is it that you do ?
a poster is asking questions about common issues that can happen
when exposing film and developing negatives ...
what is your way you expose a negative.
i know there are as many ways to expose a sheet or roll of film
as there are people with cameras .. but what do YOU do..
do you expose at box speed, ambient meter ( or sunny11 ) ?
do you have your own personal speed tailor made for the way you develop your film ?
do you expose for the shadows and let everything fall into place?
do you expose for the high notes and let everyrthing fall into place?
do you not worry about it and everything seems to work out?
or do you expose every sheet of film, every frame on a roll in a custom way
so you can slide the mid tones up and down the scale and get a negative you want, every time?
or do you rely on the camera's ability to expose the perfect negative ( like the yashica T4 was known to do )
some people spend a short amount of time doing tests, they find what works and don't worry about it
others spend more time doing tests and make their negatives effortlessly (or seemingly so because of experience behind the box or in the dark ) ..
and still others enter into the realm of densitometry and sensitonimetry and make perfect exposures by understanding exactly how everything works at
more of a scientific level ...
what is it that you do ?



