glbeas
Member
I have an old PM2L color analyzer, has an analog meter and does a fine job metering my black and white prints.
I'm using the Timer II exposure meter from RHDesigns and it is excellent when used similar to your Level1-approach but please avoid a fundamental mistake. darkroom meters are only good when used in your level1-method. They should not be used as a method to avoid test strips. test strips have invaluable information in them and done correctly and possibly in combination with a darkroom meter,they can not just save you time and paper but get you closer to a perfect print.Are you using an enlarger meter? It sits on the easel and tells you the brightness of a spot in your image.
While I'm waiting for the meter from Darkroom Automation to arrive, I hacked together a meter out of a photodiode taken from a 1990's plastic SLR connected to a decent voltmeter. I convert millivolts to EV numbers using a table I printed. Here are three levels of sophistication I can think of:
Level 1: Use the meter to get a tone correct. You must determine (once) from a test-strip that a certain EV (at a given exposure-time) yields the correct skin-tone (or some other tone, such as near-black or near-white). From then on, for any negative, turn the aperture ring until the meter gives you that EV, and then that metered spot will print at that tone. Simple.
Level 2: Measure nearly-black and nearly-white points in your image, average them, giving you the mid-tone EV. Turn the aperture until that mid-tone is at the correct EV, thus ensuring the overall exposure is correct.
Level 3: Use the nearly-black and nearly-white numbers measured above to select the grade. To avoid the calculations and looking up a number in a grade-table, an analyzer such as from RH Designs can do this work for you.
I'm at level 1 (getting one tone right). Even that takes experience, as shown by my stupid mistake from yesterday: I measured a bright spot on somebody's forehead and used that as the skin-tone, which made everything else too dark. Duh. But even at my basic level, I have eliminated most test strips.
If you have a meter, how are you using it?
Mark Overton
I've been thinking about buying the RHDesigns meter to move the process along. Only issue though is I haven't done any research into it so I don't know if I can keep printing the way i like to print or if I'd have to use contrast filters instead...
I have an Ilford EM10 I use for quick small prints from time to time. Works great. It doesn't produce a perfect print, but one that is acceptable. I have a chart with the values matched to grades but i split print so it makes it pretty simple. Match the highlight value and that is 7ish seconds through the green filter, then meter the shadows. Take that number and consult the chart and I get the blue exposure. It isn't perfect of course because there is a bit of a sliding scale, but it is close enough to avoid test strips on things i don't want to spend time on.
Patrick, could you describe your process in more detail? Perhaps include your chart?
I use a LED lamp, which eliminates filters. It's easy to switch green and blue on/off, so your technique is appealing. My concern is that paper is more sensitive to blue than green, but a meter that matches the human eye will be more sensitive to green. Perhaps your chart accommodates this difference. Also, green has some effect on shadows, and blue has some effect on highlights. Do you have a way to compensate for these cross-effects? Or are they minor enough to be ignored?
Mark Overton
I've never found that to be a big problem. I simply open up the aperture to find my metering location then stop the lens back down before metering.The Analyzer Pro requires you to stop down the aperture when metering. But doing so makes it hard to see things in the image (and thus hard to meter them) because they are dim.
Interesting responses.
Some folks don't use a meter, as their experience and intuition serve them well.
Most people with a meter use it to get close enough for casual prints, and to get a jump-start on critical work.
Those with an RH Designs Analyzer Pro use it to eliminate most or all test strips.
I read the instructions for the RH Designs Analyzer Pro. It's impressive and well thought-out. You measure two or more tones, and then you can shift them as a group to be lighter/darker until they will print the tones you want. But the meter in this unit assumes you are using a tungsten/halogen or cold light lamp, so it has no calibration data for LED lamps, so I would have to calibrate it myself. Hmmm. This is something @dkonigs might consider adding to his Printalyzer: Make it easy to enter a calibration-offset (one EV number) for the light-source used for metering. That would be helpful for those with LED lamps.
The Analyzer Pro requires you to stop down the aperture when metering. But doing so makes it hard to see things in the image (and thus hard to meter them) because they are dim. A smarter meter need not have this requirement, because the meter can tell you both how much to stop down, and time. I am using a crude home-built meter consisting of a photodiode connected to a voltmeter, and even it lets me meter at open aperture. A subtraction tells me how much to stop down.
Mark Overton
The manual assumes you're going to do it this way, but you could easily calibrate it otherwise. Remember that its process assumes you're taking measurements with no filters, then printing with a chosen contrast filter. (and those filters already have a similar effect on light intensity as "stopping down")The Analyzer Pro requires you to stop down the aperture when metering. But doing so makes it hard to see things in the image (and thus hard to meter them) because they are dim.
It doesnt matter what light source you are using you have to calibrate it for the paper. From memory it is set up for ilford multigrade iv (with a condenser enlarger?) but it still recommends calibrating it.
Are these speeds specified for a particular wavelength? It seems to me that speeds and certainly exposure ranges will differ based on green-blue ratio.B&W printing papers, in their published datasheets, specify their sensitivity with two numbers: ISO(P) and ISO(R).
ISO(P), the paper speed, is specified as the exposure necessary to achieve a density of D=0.60.
ISO(R), the contrast range, is specified as the exposure range between what's needed for a density of D=0.40 and D=0.90.
Are these speeds specified for a particular wavelength? It seems to me that speeds and certainly exposure ranges will differ based on green-blue ratio.
ISO(R), the contrast range, is specified as the exposure range between what's needed for a density of D=0.40 and D=0.90.
I think the values are D=0.04 for the lower and 90% of DMax for higher bound.
Do you have a reliable and free source of these standards? For e.g. 120 backing paper I found a free Indian standard that is essentially a copy of the corresponding ISO standard. For the paper ISO standards I have unfortunately not had success using this route.
My meter from Darkroom Automation arrived today! But I found it difficult to find the spot I wanted to meter in the image because the white strip around the sensor is too narrow, so it shows too little of the image. So I taped a larger piece of paper around the sensor:
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This paper makes the meter much easier to use. Now I can see plenty of context, making it much easier to locate the spot to meter.
Another criticism is that the sensor is 0.9 inches above the easel, causing EV numbers to be about 0.15 too high at my usual working-distance for making 4x5 prints from 35mm negatives with an 80 mm lens. Darkroom Automation suggests raising the enlarger 0.9 inches, then measuring, then lowering. But that is a hassle and it causes critical focus to be lost. Instead, I'll mentally subtract 0.15 when metering.
Another criticism is its poor sensitivity. Consider a spot that would print at near-white (Zone VIII) for an 8-second exposure at grade 2 on Ilford RC paper. Such a common spot is too dark on the easel for this meter. You would need to open the aperture some or remove the grade 2 filter in order to meter that spot. BTW, opening the aperture for metering is a poor option due to significant mechanical inaccuracy in apertures. But that's a topic for another posting.
A quirk I noticed (not really a flaw) is that if my fingers are above the display, even if I'm holding the sides of the meter, light from the display reflects off my fingers into the sensor, creating wrong measurements. I must remember to hold it below the display.
Despite these criticisms, I like the meter. It displays EV numbers to two decimal digits, which is more than sufficient accuracy for precise work. It updates the display once per second, which is quick enough that I can examine several interesting spots in the image. It even handles PWM (pulsed light) correctly, so you can measure light from an LED-lamp. Now I can stop using my Flintstones meter (that's what I call my photodiode+voltmeter arrangement).
Mark Overton
Desired | Shadow | Shadow | Mid-gray | Mid-gray | Skin-tone | Skin-tone |
Grade | Green | Blue | Green | Blue | Green | Blue |
00 | 0 | off | 0 | off | 0 | off |
0 | .1 | 4.3 | .3 | 4.5 | .2 | 4.4 |
1 | .6 | 3.7 | .8 | 3.9 | .4 | 3.5 |
2 | 1.4 | 3.6 | 1.1 | 3.3 | .7 | 2.9 |
3 | 2.3 | 3.4 | 1.9 | 3 | 1.2 | 2.3 |
4 | 3.3 | 3.3 | 2.7 | 2.7 | 1.9 | 1.9 |
5 | off | 3.1 | off | 2.6 | off | 1.7 |
In that case I take the easel out when I meter. My probe (different meter than that one) is same height as my easel. I also have the white patch on mine (came that way) and the image would be focused on the white patch without the easel.t the sensor is 0.9 inches above the easel, causing EV numbers to be about 0.15 too high n
That's a good idea! The DA meter is 23mm tall, and my (home-made) easel is 18mm. The leftover 5mm at my usual working-height will cause a 0.03-stop shift, which is insignificant. Thanks again for suggesting this!In that case I take the easel out when I meter. My probe (different meter than that one) is same height as my easel. I also have the white patch on mine (came that way) and the image would be focused on the white patch without the easel.
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