bdial
Subscriber
Stone,
Your method is pretty similar to what I do most of time. The method works pretty well. An incident reading is the same as placing your mid tones at zone 5, you just need to make sure you're metering the same light that's falling on your designated mid tones in the scene.
A few years ago at a workshop I was trying to get my head around more of the zone system. I borrowed the instructor's spot meter, spent a good bit of time measuring shadows at zone 1, highlights at zone 8, and checking mid tones.
I then compared what the spot meter was telling me for highlight placement to the incident reading from my Luna Pro, and they were the same.
Before you read The Negative, find a copy of Fred Picker's Zone VI Workshop book and read it. It covers all this stuff in a much more understandable way than St Ansel's book, but the Adams book takes it much further.
By the way, if you happened to get the Fred Picker video, it shows him working with a Pentax spot meter with a zone scale pasted on it. It's really the same as the numbers that are already on the meter, but it shows the grey tones with the zone scale roman numerals instead of the arabic that are printed on the meter. It's a good visual demonstration of this business of metering high and low tones and figuring out zone placement.
Your method is pretty similar to what I do most of time. The method works pretty well. An incident reading is the same as placing your mid tones at zone 5, you just need to make sure you're metering the same light that's falling on your designated mid tones in the scene.
A few years ago at a workshop I was trying to get my head around more of the zone system. I borrowed the instructor's spot meter, spent a good bit of time measuring shadows at zone 1, highlights at zone 8, and checking mid tones.
I then compared what the spot meter was telling me for highlight placement to the incident reading from my Luna Pro, and they were the same.
Before you read The Negative, find a copy of Fred Picker's Zone VI Workshop book and read it. It covers all this stuff in a much more understandable way than St Ansel's book, but the Adams book takes it much further.
By the way, if you happened to get the Fred Picker video, it shows him working with a Pentax spot meter with a zone scale pasted on it. It's really the same as the numbers that are already on the meter, but it shows the grey tones with the zone scale roman numerals instead of the arabic that are printed on the meter. It's a good visual demonstration of this business of metering high and low tones and figuring out zone placement.
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