avizzini
Member
I shoot mostly Delta 400 (when I don't want to bring along a tripod) and Delta 100. I use it at box speed and develop at Ilford recommended times using DDX. I invert the tank 4 times every minute for 10 seconds.
I feel like my negativs lack contrast at times. They are usually good to scan but their flatness feels a bit more problematic sometimes when making darkroom prints. I sometimes have to add a good bit of contrast to get what I want and at that point the print loses tones and gets harsher grain. Nothing crazy bad but, there's room for improvement. I usualy do split grade printing, if this makes a difference.
At the moment I’m using an iPhone metering app that functions as a reflective light meter getting an average of the entire scene. I try to meter the scene taking into account what it’s pointed at so that it’s looking at shadows, mid tones, and highlights so that it’s a good average… Should I avoid the sky altogether when metering this way?
Most of the time I’m use a light red filter (#25). I used to add 2 stops of exposure for this but, I decided to go with 3 when using the red filter. It seems to have helped a bit. When I’m in bright areas or scenes with a lot of snow, I’ll add 1-2 stops on top of what the meter is giving me.
What is a good straightforward way to meter landscapes when working with roll film (120). As I understand it, methods such as the Zone System are not as practical with roll film as you can’t develop each negative uniquely and especially for landscape where each scene being photographed can vary a lot.
Let me know if either of these scenarios would give me better results:
Scenario 1
With the adage « Meter for the shadows develop for the highlights… » can this be translated when shooting roll film where I can’t differentiate development for each image?
Say I’m using Delta 400 @ F16 and I spot meter important shadows and I get a shutter speed of 1/30s. Since this would give me « grayish » shadows, I would actually shoot it at F16 for 1/250s or 1/500s taking them down 2 - 3 stops. At this point if I develop normally would I get better negatives more often than if I just took an overall reflective average? Would this give me bad highlights since I can’t really do much in development for my highlights due to changing lighting conditions?
Scenario 2
I also see that some recommend not shooting the film at box speed but rather slower. In the case of Delta 400 would I treat it as ISO 320 or even 200? What about Delta 100, treat it like 80 or 50?
Assuming I rate Delta 400 at 320 would I still develop it normally as if I were shooting it at 400 (8 mins with DDX) or would I pull it?
...
I’m not looking for perfection just improvements on what I’m currently doing. I don’t want to get too lost in the technical details and theory. Just some straightforward suggestions that might help.
I feel like my negativs lack contrast at times. They are usually good to scan but their flatness feels a bit more problematic sometimes when making darkroom prints. I sometimes have to add a good bit of contrast to get what I want and at that point the print loses tones and gets harsher grain. Nothing crazy bad but, there's room for improvement. I usualy do split grade printing, if this makes a difference.
At the moment I’m using an iPhone metering app that functions as a reflective light meter getting an average of the entire scene. I try to meter the scene taking into account what it’s pointed at so that it’s looking at shadows, mid tones, and highlights so that it’s a good average… Should I avoid the sky altogether when metering this way?
Most of the time I’m use a light red filter (#25). I used to add 2 stops of exposure for this but, I decided to go with 3 when using the red filter. It seems to have helped a bit. When I’m in bright areas or scenes with a lot of snow, I’ll add 1-2 stops on top of what the meter is giving me.
What is a good straightforward way to meter landscapes when working with roll film (120). As I understand it, methods such as the Zone System are not as practical with roll film as you can’t develop each negative uniquely and especially for landscape where each scene being photographed can vary a lot.
Let me know if either of these scenarios would give me better results:
Scenario 1
With the adage « Meter for the shadows develop for the highlights… » can this be translated when shooting roll film where I can’t differentiate development for each image?
Say I’m using Delta 400 @ F16 and I spot meter important shadows and I get a shutter speed of 1/30s. Since this would give me « grayish » shadows, I would actually shoot it at F16 for 1/250s or 1/500s taking them down 2 - 3 stops. At this point if I develop normally would I get better negatives more often than if I just took an overall reflective average? Would this give me bad highlights since I can’t really do much in development for my highlights due to changing lighting conditions?
Scenario 2
I also see that some recommend not shooting the film at box speed but rather slower. In the case of Delta 400 would I treat it as ISO 320 or even 200? What about Delta 100, treat it like 80 or 50?
Assuming I rate Delta 400 at 320 would I still develop it normally as if I were shooting it at 400 (8 mins with DDX) or would I pull it?
...
I’m not looking for perfection just improvements on what I’m currently doing. I don’t want to get too lost in the technical details and theory. Just some straightforward suggestions that might help.
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