If you trade the RB in for a Hasselblad, your back will thank you and you could stop wearing a truss.

If you trade the RB in for a Hasselblad, your back will thank you and you could stop wearing a truss.
We have to do that again!
I agree. Maybe next time I won't be sweating so much and won't miss focus of you in the trees!
I think the issue is probably related to what ended up being "shadows" in the subject.
With the low SLR, the shadows in this scene ended up being high up in the curve, even if they were placed on Zone III. They were always going to be close to the highlights in this scene.
Thanks Matt. So in a low SLR( low brightness range as in overcast conditions?) the curve is not as long as presumably the zones stop at say VI or VII and in a shorter curve what limited zones there are will be compressed i.e. closer together. It sounds as if you are saying that zones move on the curve depending on the Subject Brightness Range. So does that mean that the meter's registration of zone III will vary with SBR and that zone III moves?
I must admit I had always assumed that on the curve each zone due to its standard of brightness always occupied the same space in length i.e. zone III is always zone III on a meter whether it is zone III in a scene with 9 zones or 6 zones. The curve is simply shorter because there is no zone VIII or IX there but the curve simply stops sooner rather than it compressing the space between say zone III and zone VI or zone VII?
Or have I got some of this right and some wrong or is my reasoning above all wrong?
Thanks
pentaxuser
Have a look at what Ilford itself says about the 2 films here:https://www.ilfordphoto.com/hp5-vs-delta-professional-400/
They appear to rate both equally in terms of pushing ability
pentaxuser
I don't understand how - according to Ilford on that link - Delta 400 can be more fussy about exposure than HP5+ (i.e. less latitude) and have a similar (actually wider) range of viable ISO ratings?
Pushing doesn't help you (much) with the shadows. It helps you with the lower mid-tones and mid-tones, by boosting their contrast.
Whether or not a film is good for pushing really depends on how the highlights respond to over-development. A "pushable" film is one that allows you to retain better highlight detail when development is increased.
You have eloquently expressed exactly what has been bothering me for a while. Presumably this doesn't only apply to HP5+, though?The examples of successful pushing of HP5+ frequently shared online are cheating a little: they almost always rely on inherent high contrast of a scene and contain a well-lit subject surrounded by under-exposed / lost shadows which works quite well. In fact I would argue that such examples are actually exposed at box speed, if you admit that the exposure was based on a small well-lit portion of a scene. Try pushing any of them to ISO 1600 with a low-contrast subject without a standout bright object in a scene and you'll see the limits of pushing.
Is there general agreement among 'pushers' as to which is more desirable?
The best that I have seen seems to indicate that extending development increases the contrast and does not increase the speed.
On the other hand, as mentioned, some developers do give increased shadow detail ("speed") and are good for pushing, like Microphen, DD-X, maybe Xtol (haven't tried).
I did a test for hp5 @1600 specifically for concert photography. So we are in dark light with high contrast stage lights. I tested DDX, hc110, and as a pure crazy attempt I did FX2 stand developed because I read that glycin MIGHT have stand development potential. The DDX and hc110 blocked highlights and I didn’t like the grain. The fx2 stand was easily the best for what I was looking for. Decent shadow detail for 2 stop push, decent grain, and easily the best tonal scale. Im not a fan of stand developing, but it worked very well in that environment.
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