lensman_nh
Member
I come to collective in search of wisdom.
PAN-F is one of my favorite films, and I love both the grain and tonal quality.
But today I was using some fairly dense ND filters to smooth out water motion. The metered exposure (hand held spot) was around 1 second at f22. With a 3 stop ND filter that takes me to (2, 4, 8) 8 seconds.
The data sheet gives a reciprocity curve that says the exposure should be about 20 seconds. Which is what I gave. The frames are way overexposed, so much so it looks like 8 seconds would probably have been right. Has anyone else noticed that the given reciprocity curve seems to way overexpose? Perhaps it works better at very low EVs (nighttime) rather than very heavy ND filters, though that doesn't seem to make sense.
The other "Normal" exposures on the roll (1s or less) are just fine, so it's not a systematic failure.
I'm planning to conduct a test of my filters with metered + filter factor, then an additional +1 and +2 stops to figure out my own reciprocity curve.
Any wisdom here to impart?
J.
PAN-F is one of my favorite films, and I love both the grain and tonal quality.
But today I was using some fairly dense ND filters to smooth out water motion. The metered exposure (hand held spot) was around 1 second at f22. With a 3 stop ND filter that takes me to (2, 4, 8) 8 seconds.
The data sheet gives a reciprocity curve that says the exposure should be about 20 seconds. Which is what I gave. The frames are way overexposed, so much so it looks like 8 seconds would probably have been right. Has anyone else noticed that the given reciprocity curve seems to way overexpose? Perhaps it works better at very low EVs (nighttime) rather than very heavy ND filters, though that doesn't seem to make sense.
The other "Normal" exposures on the roll (1s or less) are just fine, so it's not a systematic failure.
I'm planning to conduct a test of my filters with metered + filter factor, then an additional +1 and +2 stops to figure out my own reciprocity curve.
Any wisdom here to impart?
J.