"Granularity/graininess is directly related to density. More exposure = higher density. Higher density = more grain".
"For example, shoot a roll of 125 speed at 64 with shortened development and a roll at 160 with normal development and examine under a microscope. The roll at 160 is going to have much better edge sharpness and less clumping than the roll exposed at 64; with half box speed you will even see bleed under the frame edges from light traveling/being dispersed through the emulsion due to excessive exposure".
"Bottom line: (in smaller formats) if you don't think there is a price to be paid for enhanced shadow detail, think again! You're trading sharpness for shadow detail. There is no free lunch!!"
Sorry guys but I just don’t get this. If what you are stating is true all of us will be getting grainy highlights with reduced detail.
Why?, well the highlights in any image will have received far far more exposure than the mid-tones and shadow areas. The highlights in any scene will always have far more density on the negative than the other values. This is an incontrovertible fact. Therefore, if the above statements were correct, I and others here would have witnessed grainy unsharp highlights in every photograph that we have ever made!
"Ansel Adam's Zone System is for sheet photography".
This is the usual uninformed statement that keeps recurring. The Zone System is first and foremost a system designed to promote visualization. This was defined by Ansel Adams as “the ability to anticipate a finished image before making the exposure”. This, to me, is the key to the Zone System. People seem to always get bogged down in the mechanical side chasing a mythological 'prefect' negative or one that prints 'easily'. However, the Zone System is really only a means to a desired end. If you read any book about the making of Ansel Adams prints you will note that, for many of his most famous images, the negative bag had a note from Ansel stating that the negative was
difficult to print. This does not mean that he screwed up the exposure/development but rather that, to achieve his desired rendering of the scene that he had visualised, required a lot of hard work in the darkroom. If you wish to apply the principles of the Zone System to roll film, there are plenty of versions of the Zone System that are designed specifically for roll film users (such as my Dad’s Zone VIII system for example).
However, all of this debate is somewhat irrelevant because the key question for any photographer is how do
I want my final image to look? If the image requires shadow detail then you have no choice but to expose your film to achieve this. If shadow detail is not important for you, then clearly it plays no important factor in deciding upon what exposure is best to use.
Bests,
David.
www.dsallen.de