BrianShaw
Member
But, Chris... no mater what... nice pics of props! Question: are the highlights (barnacles) blown or is it just that I’m looking at them on my phone?
But, Chris... no mater what... nice pics of props! Question: are the highlights (barnacles) blown or is it just that I’m looking at them on my phone?
There’s a bit more to Zone System than just measuring the darkness and placing on Zone III.
But Christopher, unless you live in a world where everything is middle gray, everything isn't going to turn out to be middle gray. It will turn out to be a wide and useful range of tones.I know, that’s the problem. I can’t get THAT involved in it because it’s too technical. Trying to understand it ruins the experience. I’ve been able to accept that. Now I’m just trying to find some method of doing of it that gives me what I need, even in its simplest form. When I tell you I’ve always shot everything with the TTL meter exactly in the middle, I mean I have shot every single frame on exactly the middle. I have never ventured out past middle gray. That makes everything that I’ve ever done that’s somewhat good, just an accident.
and reduced the exposure by a stop.
Great sunny scene exposure and development!It works exactly the same with average or centre-weighted average metering. You just have to do a bit of averaging yourself when you evaluate the subject.
As an example, when I evaluated this scene, I evaluated it as being, as an overall average, something like one Zone/stop darker than middle gray. I took me meter reading with a 30 degree reflected light meter, and reduced the exposure by a stop.
That resulted in a negative that both permitted interest in the shadows, and retained the sparkle of the specular highlights.
View attachment 271446
I didn't say the contrary, Matt.I differ from Juan (as apparently does Dr. Martin King). I consider highlights and mid-tones to be the most important parts of most subjects, whether I am using negative film or slide film.
Understood. You just have to learn to listen to both the camera, and your visualization.But prior to now, I wouldn’t have. I would have shot what the camera told me it was.
I suggest not mixing exposure/development of negative film too much with the print tones you have in your head, which can often make things unnecessarily complicated. Just get everything recorded on the film, and concentrate on your printing (or editing if you are using a computer). That’s where you really control the reproduction of tones.
Yes. Dodging the shadows and burning the highlights. Works very well with split-grade printing. It only gets tricky if you are trying to work in small, isolated areas.That’s why I’m not making any decisions until I get some test prints made. I can manipulate these images much more in Lightroom, the thing I don’t understand though is how much of that heavy editing translates to the darkroom. I can pretty much do anything I want to accomplish in the digital suites, I just don’t understand them. For instance, if I can open up the shadows enough, or recover the highlight detail with a slider maxed out, does that mean I’ll be able to do so in the darkroom?
Patience GrasshopperThat’s why I’m not making any decisions until I get some test prints made. I can manipulate these images much more in Lightroom, the thing I don’t understand though is how much of that heavy editing translates to the darkroom. I can pretty much do anything I want to accomplish in the digital suites, I just don’t understand them. For instance, if I can open up the shadows enough, or recover the highlight detail with a slider maxed out, does that mean I’ll be able to do so in the darkroom?
So all of this work and research only to come back around to the most basic thing of metering my hand in the light I'm in??!? This has to be a cruel joke right? I've heard of the technique before but didn't realize it was just the zone thing in reverse.
The weird thing that I'm finding is that I'm getting significantly more over exposures than under. They're only overexposed by a half a stop up to maybe a full stop, but they're still coming out much brighter than stuff in the past. I used to consistently get half a stop to a full stop under using TTL meters. Since I've started using this Sekonic hand held meter, and controlling things myself it's gone completely opposite of what I'm use to. It's definitely a learning curve.
Before joining here I spent a lot of time on automatic with box speed. It works fine a lot of the time. But those underexposed shots make one really mad - they're always the important ones.But prior to now, I wouldn’t have. I would have shot what the camera told me it was.
....................and your palm is always with you!Well, the Dr. Martin King referenced earlier in the thread recommended basing your metering decisions off highlight rendition, and determined that the white, textured subject was 3 1/3 Zones/stops away from Zone 5. If you use your hand, instead of it having an offset of 3 1/3 Zones/stops, it might require an offset of 2.5 Zones/stops instead. It will depend on how light or dark your skin tone is.
The advantage of using your palm is that tone doesn't usually change during the year.
....................and your palm is always with you!
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links. To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here. |
PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY: ![]() |