Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2014/01/30
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Hi Ted When I shot LF I went through all the zone system stuff. I pulled out my Pentax spotmeter this week and it has the film speeds taped to it for film and developer combinations at N-1, N-2 and so on. Very helpful if you are shooting sheet film and developing one sheet at a time - perhaps not the best approach to covering the Olympics. When I took up 35mm I discovered The New Zone System by Jim Brick. It has no doubt been posted many times before but here it is: There are four zones. Zone Good, Zone Bad, Zone Ugly, Zone Butt Ugly. To use the system: Wake up. Get out of bed. Go outside. Zone Good It is light overcast, light shadows but good light direction. Normal contrast. Expose normal (eg: ASA-100 @ 100) develop normal. Zone Bad It is dismally overcast, no shadows, perhaps even drizzle. Low contrast. Underexpose one stop (eg: ASA-100 @ 200) overdevelop 20% Zone Ugly The sun is out, sky is clear with puffy clouds, and there are blatant shadows. High contrast. Overexpose one stop (eg: ASA-100 @ 50) underdevelop 20% Zone Butt Ugly The sun is squinty bright, cloudless sky, and the shadows really deep. Very high contrast. Go in, and go back to bed!. But, if you are a die-hard... Overexpose two stops (eg: ASA-100 @ 25) underdevelop 30% On 1/30/2014 10:04 AM, tedgrant at shaw.ca wrote: > John McMaster wrote: > >> You are correct Lluis, over 16 years since I last developed a B&W >> film! Zone system all the way, spotmeter, exposure tests for base >> density then development tests for highlights all measured on a >> densitometer - how quickly I forgot :-(> > > Hi John, > When I read about the shooting methods of many of the crew I become > amazed I ever got an exposure during my 65 years of exposing film on > any assignment in my life? > MY METHOD......"OBSERVE - SHOOT!" :-) KISS! :-) Of course many times I > took light meter readings, generally landscapes and available light > photos of my children. Or working a crowd situation? I would take a > reading, then see what the camera was reading and if they were close? > generally were... SHOOT! Letting camera set and go with what it felt > fit to use. > > Imagine me shooting in an operating room and taking meter readings for > every frame when on the last book. WOMEN IN MEDICINE! Where I exposed > 500 rolls of tri-x at ASA 800 using three M7's and a couple of R8's > only a quick peak at the shutter speed red in the view finder. If it > looked cool? 99.9% of the time it was "CLICK!" > > So you can imagine my surprise of many of you lads and all the testing > and checking you went through. The zone system? My interpretation of > the zone system? > > That's the demilitarized zone between the 2 Koreas and all you need to > know about that?????? DON'T GO THERE! ;-) I could never understand > about all the time wasted figuring it out unless you were shooting > rocks and ferns and peeling paint? REAL LIFE MOMENTS? And shooting 36 > frames nearly every frame under various light conditions? > > In any event as many of the LUG CREW who go through all the digital > techie stuff, I still try to keep it KISS as much as possible as I'm > shooting . It'll still be my method as I begin shooting with a new > book designer and editor next week producing a book on the University > of Victoria's School of Medicine and it's ten year celebration. > > However I'm in awe of the folks who have the patients for all the > extra "checking" and adjusting you go through in capturing your > exposures. In deed great admiration! > > HENNING RESPONDED: > Subject: Re: [Leica] Comparing B&W M9/MM > > > "I would say expose for the highlights, because if they're overcooked > you'll never see them again. Process (develop) for the shadows. This > is closer to how one treated slide film and in that sense it's like > all digital files. With the MM files you just have more DR and can > easily pull things out from the shadows when necessary.<<<<<<<<<<<<< > > I suppose one could offer: "What works for one shooter is total > confusion to another?" > > BOTTOM-LINE? "Whatever ones method is, as long as the end result is a > cool dude photo? Who cares how you capture it? Unless a special effect > is required for a similar looking image... IE: SWISHY - PAN IMAGES > CREATING SPEED APPEARANCES?" > > cheers, > ted > > > > "wHAT'S GOOD FOR ONE IS TOTAL CONFUSION FOR ANOTHER? tHE > > > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information