ann
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- Joined
- Sep 10, 2002
- Messages
- 3,336
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- 35mm
i read the following statement (elsewhere) and in over 60 years of photo education and work i have never heard or read anything like this statement.
was i out of the room when the fax was sent :rolleyes:
"See, it's not the film that the camera detects to determine film speed. It's that little black and silver box code (DX code) on the side of the cannister. The house brand ISO 400 film has cannisters with a ISO400 DX code on them. The house brand ISO 800 film has ISO 400 film in the cannisters marked with an ISO 800 DX code. The ISO 200 house brand film has ISO 400 film in the cannisters that are marked with ISO 200 DX codes.
See, some photographers mess with push/pull processing which means that they intentionally increase or decrease exposure for a given situation. And since film has this ability to be pushed and pulled they have made cannisters that fool your camera into thinking it has three ISO rating's to choose from, taking this forgiveness of film into consideration"
i am certainly willing to learn new things and in fact try something new everyday, but perhaps i best turn in my insturctor's badge if the above is true and i am clueless.
i am asking here , as there tend to be very few "bs fools" on this site with a high ratio of those who know what they are doing.

was i out of the room when the fax was sent :rolleyes:

"See, it's not the film that the camera detects to determine film speed. It's that little black and silver box code (DX code) on the side of the cannister. The house brand ISO 400 film has cannisters with a ISO400 DX code on them. The house brand ISO 800 film has ISO 400 film in the cannisters marked with an ISO 800 DX code. The ISO 200 house brand film has ISO 400 film in the cannisters that are marked with ISO 200 DX codes.
See, some photographers mess with push/pull processing which means that they intentionally increase or decrease exposure for a given situation. And since film has this ability to be pushed and pulled they have made cannisters that fool your camera into thinking it has three ISO rating's to choose from, taking this forgiveness of film into consideration"
i am certainly willing to learn new things and in fact try something new everyday, but perhaps i best turn in my insturctor's badge if the above is true and i am clueless.
i am asking here , as there tend to be very few "bs fools" on this site with a high ratio of those who know what they are doing.
