One thing I'd like to know about using the zone system out in the field is; when you're faced with light which is changing very rapidly (literally by the second !) and your'e working with a large format camera ..... how do you have the time to: measure the SBR, make the calculations, decide where shadow details fall etc - plus - fumble about with dark cloths, slides shutters and all ?? Sometimes with this type of 'rapidly changing light' a typical scene can go from very high to very low contrast in a matter of seconds and there simply isn't time to make all the adjustments ?
Guess I'm just too slow:rolleyes:
That's a common problem, which begs for a simple solution. Here is what I do:
1. Visualize the image possible. I like dramatic scenes and dramatic lighting does not wait for me. It there one second and gone the next. But it often repeats itself or is, within reason, predictable.
2. Measure the highlights when they receive the light you want. Measure the shadows when they receive the light you want. This does not need to be the same moment or even. There can be 20 minutes between them.
3. set your camera to this anticipated light situation and...
4. wait, and wait, and wait until... yes, now is the time, oh, wait...
5. This looks good too, and that one, and that one.
I have attached an example of this. It took me 30 minutes to set up and I waited almost two hours, while my wife was waiting in the car for me. Thank God for knitting!
By the way, any drama nature is not willing to provide, gets added in the darkroom. Photography is not about reality. Reality is ugly, photography is art.