Sometime soon I will check for any kind of light leaks by making a dark exposure, even though it hopefully won't turn anything up.
I guess I need to check out some more medium format photography from other photographers. I've always really liked the look of medium format film, and I've never been as critical an observer of other peoples' output, in a technical sense, as I have been to my own out of this camera.
I started off with medium format trying to slum it with a Keiv-60, and even though the CZJ lenses I've used are
great, the mechanical cloth shutters on every camera copy I've owned has shown dramatically uneven exposure due to capping at one speed or another. The whole reason I bought this RB67 system was to get the leaf shutter lenses that wouldn't cause linear luminance gradients running across the frame. So I'm looking very closely at exposure and color consistency discrepancy between the edges and the center. But the sense I'm getting from most of the response here are that all of the hue shifting I've brought up is normal and to be expected.
Your eyes need calibration.
Your image, eyedropper center of the marked area starting on the far left R-76, G-106,B-132; R-122, G-151, B-185; left center just above the top of the marked area which is more in line with the other two areas R-102, G-133, B-164; R-89, G-118, B-150. Converting to grayscale block 1-46%, block 2-46%, block 2a-46%, block 3-49%. PS7 used as that is what I have on this computer. Right side not checked.
Were you using point sample? The blocks of color were taken from 5x5 average samples taken with he eyedropper tool in PSCC.
There's going to be some variation no matter what, depending on where exactly the dropper is placed, but here are the values I got:
- Left column RGB values: Top- 104,132,169; Mid- 162,178,201; Bottom- 150, 168, 190. Grayscale (T,M,B) 50%, 69%, 65%
- Right column RGB values: Top- 117, 141, 167; Mid- 174, 186, 200; Bottom- 174, 186, 200. Grayscale (T,M,B) 54%, 73%, 73%
The main thing I was trying to show here was the difference between the three eyedropper samples from the left side of the frame, and the three from the right. The two outermost point samples on the extreme right and left of the image are outliers from rest because they're subject to more darkening, but if you compare the two blocks in each row (eg middle left to middle right), the left side blocks are show consistently less Red. There is a hue shift across the frame.
I don't question the statement that our eyes 'fill in' and 'smooth out' what we see. And I agree that how our eyes see and how our brains process visual information is going to affect how we see color in the world compared to how film registers it. But, if we just stay on that last picture of the house... There was nothing in the scene that would have caused the eave to reflect more red light on the right, and nothing to cause the brick to be more reddish-blue on the left, and nothing to make the leaves on the shrubs look more yellow/green on the right. There is nothing but an old fence behind the camera in that shot. Farther out there are some trees and another house.
The camera was pointed directly at the sun, and yet in the image you would think that the sun was to the right, as the left 1/3rd of the sky is cooler.
I'm on the verge of just accepting it and going about using this camera for its normal purposes, which include occasional paid jobs. I still think there's
something going on, but whatever it is, it doesn't appear consistently, and isn't really identifiable. It's just that it
isn't going to be correctable in traditional prints, as far as I can tell. And while its possible to correct digitally, it's a much more involved and imprecise process, requiring a very low opacity color mask.