RPC
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- Joined
- Sep 7, 2006
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- 1,628
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My experience is that hard sunlight is above and beyond both film and digital in terms of dynamic range.
With black and white film, I need to expose for the shadows and then develop to keep the highlights under control, even more trickery needs to be done when printing this onto paper, this is basically just manual HDR processing, because you compress the range to fit the medium and has nothing to do with skill or lack thereof.
Slide-film, as far as I know, has about 5 useful stops latitude.....that's not much to go on and anyone shooting slide is familiar with that.
C-41 has more latitude, mostly for overexposure, It still needs to be exposed for the shadows and it is not easy to save the highlights without filters in full daylight.
I've shoot enough film to realize that it has it's limitations and how to work with the medium to achieve what I want.
Raw-data is just information, not a photo, what you see on the screen is a representation of that data, exposure-issues as sensor-technology continue to improve, has been less and less of a problem.
Sure, it does save clueless butts out there, as well as the odd foul up from even experienced photographers, but that is no argument for or against digital or film, it is what it is.
A scene shot in the bright sunshine will not exceed the limits of negative film if exposed properly except what you refer to as "hard" (specular?) highlights. Negative film, recording at least 12 stops can easily record the entire scene. You would not benefit from shooting digital. Agreed, slide film is more limited.
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