I know this is a topic that has been discussed to death here and on the Intertubes but allow me one more flog of this near dead corpse.
Okay. Personal film speed and personal development times. I have read about various methods for arriving at this. I have even tried several of them with more or less success. I have an Analyser Pro that has a (sort of) densitometer function. I thought of using this for my testing.
The problem I found with many methods described is that they ask for you to adjust the exposure in 1/3:rd of a stop. My Nikon FA does not allow for this in manual mode. In P or A mode it will use whatever f-stop is appropriate but will of course only show whole stops/times on the screen. So how do I test for Zone I on this camera? I normally use it for snapshots and let the camera take care of the metering. So what I really want is to find out what ISO to feed the camera and how long to develop.
I came up with following solution and would like some input regarding this. Mostly I am interested in finding out if I have everything thought out the wrong way (I mean 180 degree wrong way)
1. Film in camera (let's say T-Max 100)
2. Camera on tripod and pointed at a uniform object (mat board or such) that fills the whole picture.
3. Take one shot in manual mode and lens cap on for reference.
4. Put camera in P-mode. Program mode, camera meters everything. This is how I most often use this camera. Alternative is Aperture Priority.
5. Adjust ISO to 1600. This should underexpose by 4 stops and be Zone I.
6. Take a shot.
7. Adjust ISO down 1/3 stop and take a shot.
8. Repeat down to ISO 800 and then bracket 3 shots 1/3 stop above 1600
- Waste the rest of the shots or remove film in darkroom condition.
- Develop per normal.
- After washing and drying the film use the Analyser densitometer to measure the first frame as base+fog = Log 0.0
- Find the frame that measures nearest to Log 0.1. This should be Zone I and also my personal film speed for this camera and this film.
Personal development time.
1. Load rest of film in same camera or use new film.
2. Use my spanking new personal ISO on my camera.
3. Use same setup with mat board as previously.
4. Overexpose 4 step by adjusting ISO down from my personal film speed. If I run out of ISO:s use 2 step exposure compensation and 2 step ISO. So if my personal ISO for TMAX is 80, compensate +2 stops and use ISO 20.
5. Shot the whole film at this setup.
6. Remove film in darkroom and cut in 4 pieces. Store safely.
- Develop first piece as you normally do for this film/developer combo. Let's say 8min.
- After washing mark film strip as Normal (8 minutes)
- Develop the rest 10%, 20% and 30 % less time and mark them.
- The strip that reads Log 2.5 should be Zone 9 and my personal dev time.
I even think this could be used for finding N-1 and N-2 dev times. Not that I use much of those with roll film.
If you have managed to stay awake for this long could you kindly inform me if this is even semi-correct or a complete brain fart. Would like to know before I waste a roll or two on this.
Many thanks
Mats
Okay. Personal film speed and personal development times. I have read about various methods for arriving at this. I have even tried several of them with more or less success. I have an Analyser Pro that has a (sort of) densitometer function. I thought of using this for my testing.
The problem I found with many methods described is that they ask for you to adjust the exposure in 1/3:rd of a stop. My Nikon FA does not allow for this in manual mode. In P or A mode it will use whatever f-stop is appropriate but will of course only show whole stops/times on the screen. So how do I test for Zone I on this camera? I normally use it for snapshots and let the camera take care of the metering. So what I really want is to find out what ISO to feed the camera and how long to develop.
I came up with following solution and would like some input regarding this. Mostly I am interested in finding out if I have everything thought out the wrong way (I mean 180 degree wrong way)
1. Film in camera (let's say T-Max 100)
2. Camera on tripod and pointed at a uniform object (mat board or such) that fills the whole picture.
3. Take one shot in manual mode and lens cap on for reference.
4. Put camera in P-mode. Program mode, camera meters everything. This is how I most often use this camera. Alternative is Aperture Priority.
5. Adjust ISO to 1600. This should underexpose by 4 stops and be Zone I.
6. Take a shot.
7. Adjust ISO down 1/3 stop and take a shot.
8. Repeat down to ISO 800 and then bracket 3 shots 1/3 stop above 1600
- Waste the rest of the shots or remove film in darkroom condition.
- Develop per normal.
- After washing and drying the film use the Analyser densitometer to measure the first frame as base+fog = Log 0.0
- Find the frame that measures nearest to Log 0.1. This should be Zone I and also my personal film speed for this camera and this film.
Personal development time.
1. Load rest of film in same camera or use new film.
2. Use my spanking new personal ISO on my camera.
3. Use same setup with mat board as previously.
4. Overexpose 4 step by adjusting ISO down from my personal film speed. If I run out of ISO:s use 2 step exposure compensation and 2 step ISO. So if my personal ISO for TMAX is 80, compensate +2 stops and use ISO 20.
5. Shot the whole film at this setup.
6. Remove film in darkroom and cut in 4 pieces. Store safely.
- Develop first piece as you normally do for this film/developer combo. Let's say 8min.
- After washing mark film strip as Normal (8 minutes)
- Develop the rest 10%, 20% and 30 % less time and mark them.
- The strip that reads Log 2.5 should be Zone 9 and my personal dev time.
I even think this could be used for finding N-1 and N-2 dev times. Not that I use much of those with roll film.
If you have managed to stay awake for this long could you kindly inform me if this is even semi-correct or a complete brain fart. Would like to know before I waste a roll or two on this.
Many thanks
Mats



