Monday317
Subscriber
I hate to be a noob and come up with stuff that is Ancient History to the rest of you, but at the risk of doing so, I thought this would be of interest to the discriminating worker:
The Ultimate Exposure Computer
I have a very wonderful, simple, Zeiss Ercona I that makes beautiful 6 x 9 negs. Almost a metal Holga in its simplicity, it has a very basic viewfinder, Tessar lens, etc. NO METER.
For any daylight situation, I get by starting with the f/16 Rule, and estimate my exposures, which has always worked well. But for night and indoors images, I had to bracket extensively--an expensive proposition with only 8 shots on a roll of film! So I thought about creating a "Massive Exposure Chart" to relate exposure to lighting situation, subject and film speed.
As is always the case, someone else came up with the idea years before and did a better job. I wanted to let others know about it; the web page above covers everything any photographer needs to know about film exposure. Thank you, Mr. Parker wherever you are!
The Ultimate Exposure Computer
I have a very wonderful, simple, Zeiss Ercona I that makes beautiful 6 x 9 negs. Almost a metal Holga in its simplicity, it has a very basic viewfinder, Tessar lens, etc. NO METER.
For any daylight situation, I get by starting with the f/16 Rule, and estimate my exposures, which has always worked well. But for night and indoors images, I had to bracket extensively--an expensive proposition with only 8 shots on a roll of film! So I thought about creating a "Massive Exposure Chart" to relate exposure to lighting situation, subject and film speed.
As is always the case, someone else came up with the idea years before and did a better job. I wanted to let others know about it; the web page above covers everything any photographer needs to know about film exposure. Thank you, Mr. Parker wherever you are!