Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/02/03
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]In case somebody out there is stll interested in exploiting image quality potential, here my findings for shooting with the Noct and Delta3200 in the night. Goal: to shoot in available darkness a high contrast subject with a full tonal scale and deep shadow differentiation. I used a model dressed in a white shirt and a black miniskirt with black stockings and black shoes. Shots were taken in the street with just the light of some lamppost and in dark corners of cafe's with very dim lighting. Exposure metering technique in all situations: incident metering. In the cafe shooting the meter reading was deliberately overexposed by a half stop to help deep shadow rendering. I used the D3200 at EI 1600 (at first) and my exposure reading was 1/15 at 1:1.0 (incident metering) This is 2/3 of a stop underexposure (D3200 is nominally ISO 1000). In these circumstances heavy pushing is possible (the white shirt will reflect enough light on the emulsion to get decent grey densities even when pushed 2 stops. You will not see any shadows of course and the white shirt is not black (on negative) but greyish. Printable but not real white. So I settled for EI 1600 and got the grey values in the shirt as expected and no difference between the dark skirt and the black stockings. That would be an indication that the deep shadow recording should be correct. (Development in D76 undiluted 10 minutes) So I made a new series at EI1000, same circumstances and as planned now I got a fabulous tonal range of corect density (white shirt very dark on negative and finely differentiated grey values between skirt and stockings). It really is very nice to take pictures in scantily lit dark corners from a inherently contrasty subject with finely graded tonality and correct white/black densities. In addition the uncanny ability of the Noct to penetrate the darkness and give the impression that the scene is more evenly lit than it was in reality lends additional pictorial interest to these images. Of course reportage dyhards and pushprocessing promotors would not in the least be interested in Zone system tonal scales in the deep dark corners of the human habitat, but well it is nice it can be done. Erwin