Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/11/23
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]> * bear in mind that virtually all "tests" in photography are really just > trials. But that's okay, since all that most of us want to do anyway is try > things to see how they work for us. Your goal in all of this should simply > be to learn the way your lenses behave, so that (if you prefer to) you can > accomodate their weaknesses and play to their strengths when you're > shooting, and not find yourself unpleasantly surprised by results you didn't > anticipate. (This is also a goal of learning about other aspects of > photographic technique.) The above citation might be expanded and annotated to reflect the true nature and purpose of several methods of factfinding. Generally all photographers are experimenters and when they change a film, or a lens, or a negative developer or a printing paper individually or as a set, they try to change variables, of which they assume that they will influence the resulting image in the preferred direction. No one will act in such a way as to randomly change the variables without any guiding principle. The goal of any experiment or theoretical study is to explore and explain the outcome of a photogrtaphic process by finding the true causes that influence the result in a significant way. Only if you know what effect a certain change in a varibable has on the result, can we accurately predict the result and avoid unhappy surprises. To measure is to know and to know is to predict, it is that simple. The question then is: if we want to predict and anticipate the results of changes in the many variables that comprise the photographic technique, how can we proceed in a reliable way? If you do not have a clue what causes are influencing the required result, you will start with a series of trials, changing one variable at a time and noting the results. To make such a process worthwile, you need to keep notes and record any change and presumed effect in order to see a pattern emerge. Without making notes and searching for patterns, you are walking in the dark. Given the large amount of photographic literature about every technical aspect, the trial stage can be skipped in most cases and we can go to true experimentation. That is: predicting from theory which variables will effect the outcome and in what amount. This last addition is crucial: knowing that there is some impact by a variable on a result is not enough: to predict we need exact information about direction and magnitude of the change in the variable. We know for sure that a change in temperature of the developer will affect the density, by by which amount. The same for agitation rythm: we know it might have impact on the grain structure, but how much impact and are there other factors that will negate this effect. Experiments then are best for fact finding in practical situations but to make the results worthwhile, we need to do: a lot of experiments to make sure we have a statistically significant pattern make copious notes of all changes during the experiments change variables one at a time to control and isolate the cause to be studied A test is the natural extension to an experiment, with one proviso: you use instrumentation to measure the phenomena you wish to have data on. And you use a test protocol to make sure that your measurements are valid. The upshot is simple: a trial is an insufficient base on which to draw any conclusion, with the exception of heuristic idea forming. To give evidential support to these ideas, we need controlled experimentation and a modicum of theory to guide us. If we do not proceed according to the time honored rules of fact gathering and corroboration of theories and hypotheses, we stay ignorant. Of course, it is every individual's right to accept and support with force whatever conclusions he is happy to believe in. If this were the universal approach to photographic technique, however, we would still be in the infancy of photographic lore, like the ideas that resolution is the important criterium for optical quality, or that high dilutions in developers generally increases the definition, or that pushing increases the speed of a film, etc. Most of these ideas were based on evidence so scanty that a nude model would look fully dressed. Let us illustrate all of this with the bokeh discussion. See Part 2 Erwin