lensman_nh
Member
So, I recently got the Interfit honey badger 2 light setup and have been having a blast learning lighting. I'm also having some ups and downs along the way, with way more ups than downs.
Over the weekend I was playing with still life in high and low key lighting.
I'm metering the flash with a Sekonic l-358. When using my digital body, the exposures given by the L-358 are pretty spot on, so the meter is good. It works well outdoors too in normal incident mode.
When shooting film however, the given EV is about 2 stops underexposed on Fujicolor in high and low key situations. ISO matches on the Meter, digital body and film. This batch of film gives normal, very printable, negatives when used for typical daylight stuff outside when exposed at box ISO. It is home processed in Kodak C-41 Flexcolor chemistry. It could be my processing, but the fact I get repeatable outdoor results at box speed suggests that's not a key factor.
This effect is really noticeable in the low key examples. The base is pretty clear, which is what you want in a low key situation. To print for maximum black, the exposure is 10 secs at f16 for a 10x8. Less than that it isn't black, more than that and it gets no darker. This is about ballpark for RA-4 8x10 prints with my equipment.
Using that exposure, it is the EV+2 negative that prints correctly for the subject and with a black background. Using the thinner negative at EV+0 and printing for the subject won't give a black background.
So, forgive the long preamble, but I have a couple of thoughts I would like to bounce off the community.
Firstly, I belive that high and low key lighting with film is brutally unforgiving of technique, and will ruthlessly expose any flaws.
My second thought is that high and low key scenes end up using the toe and heel of the response curve, and make those extremes a critical part of the image. I think that this is what is driving the need for EV+2 exposure. If the scene was more tonally compressed into the middle of the response curve the EV+0 exposure would be printable. Isn't this what the zone system is intended to do for B&W, compress the tonal range into something printable?
I'm repeating the test with HP-5+, but would appreciate any thoughts on this. Is this something others have notices, or does my technique suck?
J.
Over the weekend I was playing with still life in high and low key lighting.
I'm metering the flash with a Sekonic l-358. When using my digital body, the exposures given by the L-358 are pretty spot on, so the meter is good. It works well outdoors too in normal incident mode.
When shooting film however, the given EV is about 2 stops underexposed on Fujicolor in high and low key situations. ISO matches on the Meter, digital body and film. This batch of film gives normal, very printable, negatives when used for typical daylight stuff outside when exposed at box ISO. It is home processed in Kodak C-41 Flexcolor chemistry. It could be my processing, but the fact I get repeatable outdoor results at box speed suggests that's not a key factor.
This effect is really noticeable in the low key examples. The base is pretty clear, which is what you want in a low key situation. To print for maximum black, the exposure is 10 secs at f16 for a 10x8. Less than that it isn't black, more than that and it gets no darker. This is about ballpark for RA-4 8x10 prints with my equipment.
Using that exposure, it is the EV+2 negative that prints correctly for the subject and with a black background. Using the thinner negative at EV+0 and printing for the subject won't give a black background.
So, forgive the long preamble, but I have a couple of thoughts I would like to bounce off the community.
Firstly, I belive that high and low key lighting with film is brutally unforgiving of technique, and will ruthlessly expose any flaws.
My second thought is that high and low key scenes end up using the toe and heel of the response curve, and make those extremes a critical part of the image. I think that this is what is driving the need for EV+2 exposure. If the scene was more tonally compressed into the middle of the response curve the EV+0 exposure would be printable. Isn't this what the zone system is intended to do for B&W, compress the tonal range into something printable?
I'm repeating the test with HP-5+, but would appreciate any thoughts on this. Is this something others have notices, or does my technique suck?
J.