Sirius Glass
Subscriber
What is this "trial and error" method? I do not make errors.
I use an incident light meter, I meter as how the light falls on the subject, I shoot box speed and develop using very ordinary developers following the manufacturer's recommendations.
I print my negatives myself, I either print using a single VC grade or when required split grade
Most of my work is on 120 and some sheet film.
Modern film is amazing.
I use an incident light meter, I meter as how the light falls on the subject, I shoot box speed and develop using very ordinary developers following the manufacturer's recommendations.
I print my negatives myself, I either print using a single VC grade or when required split grade
Most of my work is on 120 and some sheet film.
Modern film is amazing.
A white haired German guy walks into a saloon and says he has discovered an equation that will change the world. He says the equation is very simple. It's e = mc squared.
The cowboys' reaction is that he's obviously a "wise guy" instead of asking him what he equation means and why he thinks it will change the world
I didn't realize Michelson and Morley were cowboys.
don't even realise who those two were until I looked it up.
I think the OP is making this more complicated than it needs to be.
Yes - it worked!
Everyone should use an interferometer at least once in their lives
I think the relative contributions of Michelson and Morley depend on who is writing about them.
I think of them as the "God and Man" of special relativitywink:Kodachrome reference).
I think everyone who does photography makes it more complicated than it needs to be. it's really not rocket science...
I think that the "spiral," once explained (more later) makes perfect sense. It's simply a graphic way of representing the process in order and the leading parameter at each step. Expose for the shadows (good advice however you meter!). Develop to a contrast that allows you to make an excellent print (yes, the window is larger with VC papers these days, but still important to get right). Base your print exposure on the highlights (the corollary to exposing film for the shadows; in each case it is the least dense areas that are important). Adjust print contrast to get the contrast you want.
To refine, repeat the process by refining your personal film speed first, then move along to the other steps, in order.
Not the only way to skin a cat, but a perfectly logical and effective one. And one I use and recommend.
@Timberwolf :
I, like many of the other respondents, didn't really appreciate the somewhat coy approach you took to presenting your idea. If you wish to contribute, please do, but please don't play games with us and make us try and guess. It sort of feels like you're toying with us and putting on airs of superiority. If that wasn't your intention, then do try to recognize when you've missed the mark and provide a clear explanation asap (don't wait till post #12 to even hint...).
If you need help, ask and you shall be given. Just keep it straightforward and simple. Be aware that the depth of expertise represented in the collective membership of this forum is enormous and comprehensive. I approach that with humility.
Best,
Doremus
Tough crowd here! I get the idea from looking at the graphic so I think it could be useful to introduce people to photographic processes without significant contrast control in the positive stage (as has been mentioned, not so much for working with VC paper).
This is perfectly right. Sometimes, questions or topics are pretty strange. Sometimes. answers are meant to put newcomers off film photography.
no kidding ! no need for people to give a NEW FORUM MEMBER a hard time. too many harsh comments, more like this there might not be many new forum members and it will be the same old crowd posting the same old same old .. which is too bad, I liked the graphic. it had an outer limits twilight zone feel to it which reminded me what it was like when I first started to do darkroom prints and was overwhelmed ... its too bad people can't remember what it was like when they took their first steps..
its a complicated but once one gets the hang of it, it's simple. ...
Like learning to ride a bike without training wheels!
I'll guess the spiral is trying to say this:
for (int attempt=0; attempt<3; attempt++) {
neg.exposeForShadows();neg.devForHighlights();print.exposeForHighlights();print.contrastForShadows();}
That means it takes three trips to the field and three attempts in the darkroom to get the photo right.
My take on it...
- when exposing negative film, give enough exposure to carry some detail in the shadows
- and develop the negative with sufficient time/temp the produce details within the highlight area
- then print the neg with sufficient time to register detail in the highlight areas of the print
- while selecting the contrast range in the paper to present the detail in the shadow areas of the print
...but I do not get why there are multiple spirals around the loop, that makes no sense to me. It is not 'iterative' for a given shot. It only is somewhat iterative if you fail to use box speed, and you then need to adjust your exposure to suit and alter neg development and the printing to suit a different shot on a different piece of film (Zone System does not work on rollfilm unless all shots on the roll use similar adjustment of exposure and processing...otherwise it is not suited to sheet film, and the spiral is not iterative for a single shot, as I said.)
jnamia, how people were learning photography before the internet? With several books available, recommendations from photo club members, practice and a little logic.
How many years it took you to develop correctly a film a print properly? A decade, a year, less?
There is no silver bullet: Or you understand what you do or you don't. But we now live in a time when everything is a given and using his brain to think about a situation and go for a more appropriate solution needs convoluted explanations. Look at the number of photo sites (or youtube video) explaining how to focus manually a lens? It is hilarious and sad at the same time.
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links. To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here. |
PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY: ![]() |