Roger: I'm not sure what you mean by "over-exposure". Do you mean more exposure than "box speed", i.e., one's personal EI rating, or over-exposure from one's tested EI? The reason I ask is that, like many others, I shoot Tri-X @ 200/250, which I arrived at through the standard "Zone I threshold" test. My development times are then based on the time/temp/agitation sequence to get a Zone VIII exposure to print to Zone VIII at the same print exposure time/conditions that give a Zone I print from the Zone I test exposure. Of course, I also check to make sure Zone III exposures are correct.
When I do this, I find grain, especially, is somewhat better than at box speed ... due to reduced time I suspect.
If I get something for free, I don't complain about some ads. Anyway, Roger has a lot of other good stuff on his site. Good to get a chance and reminder to look at the rest.
Sorry, it's just one of those things that drives me up the wall when people say "The real speed is ISO...", because it almost never is. The real speed is almost invariably the ISO speed in the manufacturer's stated developer (and can rise or fall in other developers). The EI that many people are happiest with is commonly 1/3 to 2/3 stops lower than the true ISO -- as I said myself, I'm one of 'em -- but this is in no sense a 'true' speed.
R.
The problem with the manufacturer's ISO rating is that it is arrived at with an unrealistically high contrast. In general if you follow the manufacturers recommendations for exposure and development, what you end up with is a negative that is under-exposed and over-developed.
In a word: no. It may not suit you and your subjects and equipment. It certainly didn't suit the Japanese representatives on the ISO standards committee, who lobbied for a drop equivalent to a C.I. of around 0.56. The current standard equates to about 0.615.
When the matter was discussed at the committee -- one of my friends was on it at the time -- they accepted that this was because Japan is a long way south of Rochester NY (and even further south of the original Rochester) and this affects 'typical' subject brightness ranges.
There are also certain assumptions in the ISO standard about flare levels (among other things) which may not suit your equipment. They suit a lot of mine. I could equally well say that any contrast less than the current standard would be unrealistically low.
Furthermore, thanks to the ingenious way that the ISO contrast criterion is constructed -- the Delta X criterion, as described in Stephen Benskin's brilliant paper of that name -- development time makes less difference to ISO speed than might be expected, except in the case of gross underdevelopment.
Whether or not you, or I, or the Japanese members, accept the ISO standard, at least it's a standard, not a personal EI, and anyone who talks of 'true speed' being lower is either failing to define 'true speed' at all or is using a personal definition unrelated to a standard true speed.
Finally, as an Ilford representative once said to me, "Why would we tell people to use the wrong film speeds and development times? Because we want to stop them getting the best possible results from our films? Or perhaps out of sheer spite?"
Cheers,
R.
Just FYI: I right-clicked on the link, and selected "Copy link address". Then I pasted that in here.![]()
I like the standard, because it allows us to compare. However, my needs, equipment and subject matter must be much closer to this Japanese fellow's, because 0.57 (1.2 negative density range divided by 2.1 subject brightness range or 7 zones) is what I'm shooting for (and I don't use a condensor enlarger either). IMHO, 0.615 is just too high for pictorial photography.
In any event, what I don't quite understand is, that Ilford claims not to use the ISO standard procedure to arrive at their film speeds but call it ISO on their film boxes. How does that work?
Well, I don't think I uttered the "true speed" phrase, but were I to say that, I'd simply mean FOR ME ... my equipment, my processing, my preferences, etc.Sorry, it's just one of those things that drives me up the wall when people say "The real speed is ISO...", because it almost never is.
Well, I don't think I uttered the "true speed" phrase, but were I to say that, I'd simply mean FOR ME ... my equipment, my processing, my preferences, etc.
The universe, indeed, does revolve around me.![]()
I'm not really being contentuous, just excercising my right to be in my 79th year on my name saint's feast day.
Better shadow detail and smaller grain
Does this imply also that if you rate it for example at 800 ,you would get bigger grain ??
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