There are a number of ways to use the step wedge, some of which might make your processing easer and others are just for 'curiosity.'
Currently, the most common thing I use the step wedge for is to expose film in a sensitometer to get process control strips (which are read with a densitometer). Since I use rotary processing, I need to 'figure out' a new time for each film/developer combo I am using. Using the control strips can help zeroing in on a development time that can yield printable prints. So, if I know a contast index of about .6 to .7 gives me good printable negatives I can prcess the 'unknown' to that same contrast index as a starting point (of course one can always process 'pictures' rather than step wedge images and trial and error print them with the same or better results). Maybe a time-saver, maybe 'more trouble than it is worth' but that is what I am currently doing.
The suggestions of using the step wedge for printing paper gave me some ideas. I don't have a reflection densitometer, but one could just get a total range from black to white, rather than a nice sigmoid curve that a reflection densitometer would give.
Personally I have always felt that characterizing the contrast of papers was like characterizing the speed of papers: not that useful to ME. Because I am going to do test prints for the exposure and I also have a way of doing test prints to zero in on the filtration for the contrast too.
Out of curiosity, though, I did get an idea of seeing what the setp wedge will look like on paper for some of the points on this graph that I had previously posted:rolleyes: . So, on the X-axis it could have the density range (as read from the step wedge) in addition to the contrast number assigned by Ilford. (there was a url link here which no longer exists). Again, just fine tuning or 'interesting to know' stuff.
Ansel played down sensitometers/densitometers/PH probes, but he had all those things and used them. It seemed like he used those things to satisfy his curiosity and to keep him from making any misleading statements in his books.
It reminds me of a book that was popular many years ago about hundreds of uses for gray 'Duct Tape.' Yes, there many ways to use the tape, but when one looks around one's house, you probably use very little of it in daily living. Likewise a book could be written on hundreds of uses for a step wedge, but in practical photography you may find you don't really use it much at all.
Of course if your are a Duct Tape fanatic, the above may not hold true.....
