The Zone System is, after all, a SYSTEM.
Which incorporates several elements, from deciding what the picture-on-the-wall is to look like; to which lens, filter, and film will be used, how it is to be exposed, developed, printed, and illuminated on the wall.
Conventionally it is practised by envisioning the image of the subject you wish to make, measuring how it departs from reality, exposing and developing the film to result in an ideal negative from which you can easily make the print you wish. There are limits, of course, to what can be achieved.
Alternatively the same results can be accomplished by developing the negative to satisfy specific qualities which allow the variability to be achieved in printing.
The chief merit of a 'standardised and ideal negative' is that local contrast is not sacrificed to the conventional interpretation of 'zone system', which mandates specific end points on the curve whilst allowing the more important midpoints to fluctuate.
A staining, compensating developer ( be it PMK, PyroCat, or Prescysol EF ) brings many properties which are effectively exploited by a ' standardised and ideal negative '. For the majority of subjects we tend to photograph, and the majority of situations we tend to make pictures, it is easy to satisfy Zone System criteria by:
1. visualisation
2. exposure for the deepest shadow as it will need to be in the print
3. 'Standard' development
4. Printing, using normal or soft developers in conjunction with variable grade papers to achieve the visualised image.
This will make perfect sense to some, and be anathema to others.
Here is an example of an image made under this system, illustrating its practicality: full and velvety shadows; normal local contrast and density of midtones, and rich variation of highlights that are neither 'blocked' nor 'blown'. Exposure: 1/30 at f/1.4; Film: TMY @ 400; Developed normally in Aculux 2. Printed on #2 paper, in selectol soft & dektol. Subject brightness 8000 : 1.
Any film/developer combination with a long straight-line ( HP5, FP4, for example ) would have made the same image. Prescysol EF would likely have allowed more control in the printing, and reduced the need for 2 bath development.