Maybe Sam should try that on Bergger 200 instead on TMY.
My head hurts. Attempting second half now.

)I quite like that attitude. If someone says to me "you can't do it like that...." my immediate reaction is "why? What would happen if I did?".
Steve.
Didn't Mortensens 7-Derivative technique use the principle of expose for the highlights and develop for the shadows? Mortensen certainly made some nice photographs.



Is there any practical value to any of this, or is it just a mind numbing web of irrelevant information?

I'm confused about how that old adage got to be associated with the Zone system, which didn't come until later. I knew the rules of the ASA system,
*****
I'm with you, Gainer. When I started, my favorite 35mm was Tri-X and it was an ASA 200 film-----and it has always been an EI 200 film for me. Of course, I use D23, so I really did not have to worry about overdeveloping the high contrast scenes. I called rolls like that "staccato rolls"--some high contrast shots, some lower. D23 is a very forgiving developer for those of us who would rather shoot pictures than spend our alloted time on this orb testing, and testing, and testing.
John, Mount Vernon, Virginia USA
From the story you should see now that you have SIX stops of exposure latitude!
My latitude is gone", Bob says to himself. No worry for Bob though
because he's going to develop at N-2, so that the Zone X brightness value develops only to a Zone VIII negative density value so detail will be revealed in the print at a Zone VIII tonal value. No, I'm referring to William Mortenson. He was a contemporary of the F/64 group, who really didn't like him very much.Do you mean RAY Mortenson? I love his work! I know nothing of the man or his technique (other than what is in the pages of "Meadolands"). He has a tonal scale to die for, that is for shue.
The really important thing is that you have to give enough exposure to the darkest thing of interest in the scene to make it register on the film (expose for the shadows). Development affects the shadows more or less the same regardless of extent (OK - extreme underdevelopment will underdevelop them too, but the shadows are more or less unaffected by the degree of development). The highlights are affected by development, however, and overdevelopment caused them to block up badly on older films. That's where the "develop for the highlights" came from. The situation is not so bad with modern films, but sticking to the adage still makes your printing easier. The zone system uses development to control contrast, which is a related but quite different thing. Since you can't avoid the "expose for the shadows" part and the zone system uses adjustments in development, confusion was bound to happen.
Didn't Mortensen’s 7-Derivative technique use the principle of expose for the highlights and develop for the shadows? Mortensen certainly made some nice photographs.
I was thinking the same thing as I slogged through this brain damaging thread. (However, I'm immune, brain already damaged.)
But if we put his Zone I frame under the densitometer, we would see that was not the case. He was just exposing his test print for less time, because his fogged film base was less dense from the decreased development. Thus, requiring a shorter exposure to reach maximum white. A picture graph of this is probably worth a thousand words. (I'll make one if interested)
)
Ho hum.
I'm a little baffled by this epic contribution.
I thought you'd see it as Sam making the 'zonies' look foolish by beating them at their own game
Second point: B+w negative film has some intrinsic exposure latitude which will compensate to a certain degree for incompetent technique. T-grain films lke T-max have far less latitude than conventional films, downrating T-Max 400 to EI 100 for normal subjects and development is not a good idea.
.Bruce Thornton tells about his discovery of Mortensen's portrait method in Edge of Darkness. (If you don't own this book, do so. I just got mine a month ago and found it deeply spiritual, to say nothing of tech.)
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