haris
Hello,
When calibrating enlarging exposure meters, as you know, exposure time is calibrated/metered on lightest part of projected negative (darkest part of "real life situation" image) which still have details wanted to be seen on print, and contrast on darkest part of projected negative.
So, instead of using some random negative to calibrate meter, it would be nice to have dedicated negative as calibrating device. My question is:
If I make photograph of, for example, white T-shirt and black T-shirt, one next to another, under diffused light (let say light through room window) can that be used as calibration "template". Is contrast range in that case too big? Is white T-shirt too light for calibration or black T-shirt too dark?
What would you consider as "lightest" and "darkest" tones which will be suitable to calibrate those meters?
Thank you
When calibrating enlarging exposure meters, as you know, exposure time is calibrated/metered on lightest part of projected negative (darkest part of "real life situation" image) which still have details wanted to be seen on print, and contrast on darkest part of projected negative.
So, instead of using some random negative to calibrate meter, it would be nice to have dedicated negative as calibrating device. My question is:
If I make photograph of, for example, white T-shirt and black T-shirt, one next to another, under diffused light (let say light through room window) can that be used as calibration "template". Is contrast range in that case too big? Is white T-shirt too light for calibration or black T-shirt too dark?
What would you consider as "lightest" and "darkest" tones which will be suitable to calibrate those meters?
Thank you