Vaughn
Subscriber
That is what I conclude based upon Ralph's response in post 83!LOL... just another stereotype that is either blindly believed or true enough times that folks consider it universally true.
LOL... just another stereotype that is either blindly believed or true enough times that folks consider it universally true.
Thanks Ralph,It is the result of empirical testing of a large photographic community and quite reasonable advise in MHO
and color theory too!
Do you know what the sample size is, approximately, in these studies. I understand the Power Test and confidence intervals but never saw the original studies to see the actual subject pool constituency. If that’s in the first two pages previously posted, please forgive me as o can’t read them on my phone. Must wait for a bigger display... thanks to presbyopia and cataracts not ready for fixing yet.
I’m a long-time fanboy... since graduate school some 40+ years ago, but don’t have an autographed picture. You are very lucky, in a nerdy sort of way!
Thanks Ralph,
I thought that might have been the answer all along.
So maybe there isn’t any named person who started saying it. Maybe not even a particular day when they started saying it.
Maybe I can get away with this: A large community of photography cannot agree on anything except “use half box speed”. To satisfy their intense desire to disagree... those who give this advice, fiercely disagree about why.
if you look back through the thread though @Renato Tonelli is saying his tests, which he had checked by a 2nd party, showed more than box speed but those kind of results always seemed to get brushed under the carpet.
Apart from the obvious answer there are always variations from the norm, we have no idea how the test was performed. Was it repeated with the same results? Just because I gave someone my data and they checked it, doesn't confirm that the testing methodology was appropriate and without errors. Even if the testing was good, it can just be an outlier. We need more information to properly evaluate the claims.
Once again, most of the Zone System testing resulting in speeds 2/3 slower than the ISO rating is because the testing procedures are different. In effect, one stops down 4 stops and one stops down 3 1/3. The vast majority of Zone System users got results of 1/2 - 1 stop under box speed not because that was the actual speed, but because they all used a similar methodology.
Two outside temperature readings at the same time. One in the sun and one in the shade. They can't be expected to be the same. You need to know the methodology to properly understand the data. Renato only said he made a test. Nothing about how the test was made.
In the medieval ages people thought a mandrake root looked like a human. They concluded that when picked, it would scream and anyone around would go mad. So, they put beeswax in their ears, tied the root to a dog and whipped the dog. The root got picked. Just because people agree with something and the methodology has results, doesn't make it correct.
View attachment 274412
I agree but (am my understanding is very basic and likely incorrect) - emulsion speed is determined by an average of different samples and some variance is allowed ie the master roll isnt a consistent 100 iso (or whatever) across every part of it. Just that alone will affect individual results and I am sure people can think of a number of uncontrollable factors for the end user in testing.
Two outside temperature readings at the same time. One in the sun and one in the shade.
Of course you know that the correct way to measure air temperature is in the shade?
But yes I get your point.
I also like your mandrake root analogy.![]()
Just questioning...
Doremus
If you have a lab do all your work, and you are just getting machine prints - not custom enlargements - using box speed will probably give you more good results.Where is the opposite view: that rating the film faster than box speed gives better results?
If you have a lab do all your work, and you are just getting machine prints - not custom enlargements - using box speed will probably give you more good results.
Box speed tends to give good mid-tone and highlight rendition in straight prints.
It isn't so much different criteria for an excellent print, but rather different criteria for a negative, because custom printers don't restrict themselves to negatives that print without any darkroom manipulations.Aha!
Maybe fine-art and custom printers of B&W prints have a markedly different set of standards than the processing machines do, and different criteria for what makes an "excellent" print?
Or (conspiracy-theory alert), maybe "box speed" was adopted as a standard simply because it gave the best "straight prints" from processing machines?
Doremus
I literally do not remember who said it first or who says it now.
I have repeated it so many times that searches on Photrio are going to keep pulling up my posts.
Who is it that started telling new Zone System users to “just use half box speed”, since that’s what your tests are going to find anyway.
I don’t want to keep saying “they always say” if I can credit some or a few people.
Can’t agree with any of this I’m afraid, including the underlying assumptions. Basically I would say the prevalent practice of rating films at lower than ISO speed is based on a combination of nothing, and tradition (also based mostly on nothing, along with the desire to emulate the working methods of some good photographers who also didn’t really know why they were doing what they were doing, and were using totally different materials). It has nothing to do with better results. In my experience, a very, very small number of photographers make good prints, or are even interested in print quality. This is not surprising. All art forms are like this.
Just musing to your questioning...
Perhaps the issue back before 1960 was no true consistency between brands in rating film speed, and in 1960 by defining 'the minimum' point along the sensitometric curve that helped to establish more CONSISTENCY of rating. That might be the only 'benefit' of the 1960 action, and better exposures resulted by using the 'a bit more exposure than box rating' Certainly color neg improves with +1EV to reduce muddy shadows.
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: ![]() |