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- Nov 16, 2004
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Here I am not referring to Mortensen's portraiture or models or disputes,but to his method applied to landscapes.My summary of an article by J. Lowry, Amateur Photographer, March 12 1952:
(1) Aim. A relatively increased range of tones is given to the highlights,at some sacrifice of the shadows.
(2) Materials. Fine grain film only,really fine grain developer.
(3) Exposure. For landscapes tilt the exposure meter upwards,assuming the sky is to be included in the view.
(4) Development. To finality.The article mentions 5x normal time.
(5) General. Avoid subjects with large shadow areas.Also, in summer, June, July, August, the lighting may be too contrasty for this method unless diffuse.
I will try this on an unimportant film.Just wondered if there are any comments on this landscape procedure.
(1) Aim. A relatively increased range of tones is given to the highlights,at some sacrifice of the shadows.
(2) Materials. Fine grain film only,really fine grain developer.
(3) Exposure. For landscapes tilt the exposure meter upwards,assuming the sky is to be included in the view.
(4) Development. To finality.The article mentions 5x normal time.
(5) General. Avoid subjects with large shadow areas.Also, in summer, June, July, August, the lighting may be too contrasty for this method unless diffuse.
I will try this on an unimportant film.Just wondered if there are any comments on this landscape procedure.
