olwick
Member
Hi,
You all inspired me to try pinhole photography, so I just purchased my first pinhole 4x5 off of eBay. I also have some Fuji Velvia 100F on its way.
My question is about exposure and reciprocity failure.
I know that I take my meter reading with a regular meter, then convert that for my f-stop (f/160). I'm using the convertor on Mr Pinhole, so I should be fine there. (although the times I'm seeing seem very short compared with what I see some of you using - a few seconds vs minutes.)
So how do I take that and factor in the film? According to the data sheet, I add 1/3 stop at 2 minutes, 1/2 stop at 4 minutes and 2/3 stop at 8 minutes.
Here's the newbie questions:
1. How do I "Add stops" or partial stops?
2. How do I handle exposures longer than the 8 minutes they mention?
By the way, I live in the Pacific Northwest, north of Seattle, so I'll be photographing rocky beaches, plus maybe some forests, if that factors into anything.
(I also posted this question on f295, but thought I'd try here as well, just in case)
Thanks in advance,
Mark
You all inspired me to try pinhole photography, so I just purchased my first pinhole 4x5 off of eBay. I also have some Fuji Velvia 100F on its way.
My question is about exposure and reciprocity failure.
I know that I take my meter reading with a regular meter, then convert that for my f-stop (f/160). I'm using the convertor on Mr Pinhole, so I should be fine there. (although the times I'm seeing seem very short compared with what I see some of you using - a few seconds vs minutes.)
So how do I take that and factor in the film? According to the data sheet, I add 1/3 stop at 2 minutes, 1/2 stop at 4 minutes and 2/3 stop at 8 minutes.
Here's the newbie questions:
1. How do I "Add stops" or partial stops?
2. How do I handle exposures longer than the 8 minutes they mention?
By the way, I live in the Pacific Northwest, north of Seattle, so I'll be photographing rocky beaches, plus maybe some forests, if that factors into anything.
(I also posted this question on f295, but thought I'd try here as well, just in case)
Thanks in advance,
Mark