Vaughn
Subscriber
I use LF and keep notes in yellow Rite-in-the-Rain waterproof notebooks. Date, place, film, lens, filter, exposure, a couple meter readings, a small very rough messy drawing of the scene, and later on, how I developed the neg. No form that I fill out, just a standard way I right the info down -- maybe two of three lines in the notebook. Pretty compact. I transfer most of the info onto the paper negative envelopes that hold the negatives.
Why -- 1) tells me how to develop the sheet of film later, 2) when I do something right, I'll know how to do it again, and 3) the books become a journal and record of where and when I have photographed over the last 30 years of using LF cameras. Many times I have gone back to the notebooks to see when, for example, I photographed my boys at the base of Bridalveil Falls, or what year and season I took a particular road trip.
Vaughn
Why -- 1) tells me how to develop the sheet of film later, 2) when I do something right, I'll know how to do it again, and 3) the books become a journal and record of where and when I have photographed over the last 30 years of using LF cameras. Many times I have gone back to the notebooks to see when, for example, I photographed my boys at the base of Bridalveil Falls, or what year and season I took a particular road trip.
Vaughn