Noob question
I am shooting black and white 35mm film and processing/printing myself
I have been told that if I meter a "white cat in the snow" I should over-expose by 1 or 2 stops from what the meter says so the image doesn't come out grey. (And opposite for dark tone metering.)
I am wondering if it isn't better to expose as neutral grey regardless of the overall tone and adjust the look I want when I print
That is: Should I expose for the steepest part of the film response curve (neutral grey) to get every hair on the cat defined and print with a short enlarger exposure to get a light tone?
I hope this makes sense
Thank you for your help
I am shooting black and white 35mm film and processing/printing myself
I have been told that if I meter a "white cat in the snow" I should over-expose by 1 or 2 stops from what the meter says so the image doesn't come out grey. (And opposite for dark tone metering.)
I am wondering if it isn't better to expose as neutral grey regardless of the overall tone and adjust the look I want when I print
That is: Should I expose for the steepest part of the film response curve (neutral grey) to get every hair on the cat defined and print with a short enlarger exposure to get a light tone?
I hope this makes sense
Thank you for your help