Stephen Benskin
Member
I sez it.
I went through the whole rigmarole back in the 70's and ended up with Tri-X at somewhere around 250-300. I found I am not alone - it seems everyone comes up around a stop short. So why not save an awful lot of film and chemistry and buy the wife something nice with the money you would have thrown away on a densitometer?
In any case a stop of safety margin and a stop's more shadow detail are nice things to have. I don't always meter to a gnat's backside of shadow detail. In my take the ASA/ISO speeds are the highest speed you can rate the film and still bring back Mr. Jones' "First Excellent Print." Going at the highest rated anything is something I have found to be a generally bad idea.
For color transparency it is a whole 'nuther matter.
I think it all started with the Illuminati.
It's a common misconception that the ASA speed was actually at the fractional gradient point. The fractional gradient point determined the minimum point of exposure that would yield an excellent quality print, but the film speed rating of the pre 1960 standard is actually an EI that was calculated based on the fractional gradient speed. Film speeds doubling after the 1960 standards proves the previous rating wasn't at the fractional gradient point, as does a number of papers.
Jones' testing didn't conclude that the Fractional Gradient point was the exposure aim, it concluded that exposure shouldn't fall below it. And that the method had the highest degree of agreement with the print judgement speeds.
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