There should NOT have been a significant difference in 'proper exposure' for film vs. digital ...I have owned an used a handheld incident exposure meter during my days shooting weddings in the 1990s, and not with digital SLRs over the past 15 years. There is NOT a fundamental difference between exposing film for 'proper exposure' vs. exposing digital for 'proper exposure'.
Perhaps the aperture was not closing properly on the film camera's lens, perhaps the shutter speed was not correct on the film camera's body, causing a fundamental mismatch of exposure.
That is interesting, as Kodak says that one of the benefits of the tweaks engineered into the new E100 is that it is very accurately described as a 100 ISO film.I also talked to the guy who scans my film and he said I should shoot at ISO80 when using the new Ektachrome because its actually more like an 80iso film. thanks again!
That is interesting, as Kodak says that one of the benefits of the tweaks engineered into the new E100 is that it is very accurately described as a 100 ISO film.
I would be cautious using a DSLR to meter flash when you are using slide film in a film camera that uses different lenses. I would also want to familiarize myself with how the slide film and digital camera differ in rendering - if you are going to depend on the digital viewing screen to help you with exposure, you should be familiar with how it and the film you are using behave differently when used in the same circumstances.
A DSLR can be used for this, but you need to calibrate the procedure before relying on it with slide film.
I would say the same for a flash meter.
Exactly, although a 36 exp single roll of film and a methodical approach toward bracketing exposures, and adjusting lighting, plus detailed note taking should give you almost all the information you need. If you have more than one lens for your Contax, you should test each lens.How would I go about 'calibrating the procedure? trial and error?
sounds like a more serious error than just lens discrepancies. Are you absolutely certain that you had the same settings (aperture and ISO) on both cameras, maybe the DSLR did auto ISO unbeknownst to you or something like that? Can you check the digital test shots again?it was hard to see the clothes
As long as they have a manual mode and an adjustable ISO range close to the film you are using.For test shots I use some old digital compact camera (a Canon Powershot S95 or a Panasonic LX-3), not a DSLR. They have poor highlight and shadow latitude, more than any negative or positive film, so they are a pesimistic previews. But they ok for me to balance exposure or contrast.
As long as they have a manual mode and an adjustable ISO range close to the film you are using.
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