Can you photograph long exposure without mesuring the light but just guessing by intuition, and get good results?
Or is it a mith?
. . . FWIW, it's much better to err on the side of overexposure than underexposure in these situations. And, keep in mind that a one-stop increase in exposure is a doubling of the exposure time. That means that in order to overexpose a 10-minute exposure by one stop, you will need 20 minutes. One stop of overexposure is fairly easy to deal with. Even two stops isn't much of a problem with larger film (that would be a 40 minute exposure in our example). And, to get three stops of overexposure, you are into the hour-and-a-half range... So, when in doubt, longer is going to be safer.
Best,
Doremus
I don't plan to do night photographs (now) but to photograph indoors and dark days with pinhole camera, which can easy reach the 30min/1h exposure + reciprocity failure.
Fiji across is expensive on 4x5 so I am fist using Delta 100 and later on Fomapan 200 and 400.
What great idea - read the film's technical data to get reciprocity failure information!
I don't plan to do night photographs (now) but to photograph indoors and dark days with pinhole camera, which can easy reach the 30min/1h exposure + reciprocity failure.
Fiji across is expensive on 4x5 so I am fist using Delta 100 and later on Fomapan 200 and 400.
Maybe the Pinholedesigner software could be helpful for you? http://www.pinhole.cz/en/pinholedesigner/
Reciprocity failure calculations is one of the things it does.
What I did with my pinhole camera was to to shoot some film at high noon. Found the best exposure and then for every stop of light below that I doubled my time. Works perfectly and is super easy to calculate in the field.
For example let's say at high noon the exposure was 4 seconds that is your base.
Minus one stop of light = 8 seconds
Minus two stops of light = 16 seconds
Minus three stops of light = 32 seconds
Minus four stops of light = 64 seconds
I was making perfect exposures at four stops under my base this way. You really need to test with your film and find that base exposure to build from.
What I did with my pinhole camera was to to shoot some film at high noon. Found the best exposure and then for every stop of light below that I doubled my time. Works perfectly and is super easy to calculate in the field.
For example let's say at high noon the exposure was 4 seconds that is your base.
Minus one stop of light = 8 seconds
Minus two stops of light = 16 seconds
Minus three stops of light = 32 seconds
Minus four stops of light = 64 seconds
I was making perfect exposures at four stops under my base this way. You really need to test with your film and find that base exposure to build from.
What great idea - read the film's technical data to get reciprocity failure information!
http://phototechmag.com/black-and-white-reciprocity-departure-revisited-by-howard-bond/
Everything you need to know. His numbers work really really well.
I find hard to understend.
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