Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2005/06/10
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]In the 1981 edition of "The Negative," Chapter 3 "Exposure," Section "Metering Exposure," Ansel Adams writes: [quote]...A calibrated middle gray value exists in the Kodak 18 percent reflectance neutral gray card...Knowing that the meter is calibrated to reproduce this value, we must remember that making a reading from any [italics] single luminance surface in the subject and using that reading to determine exposure will cause that surface to be reproduced as middle gray in the final print...If we place the gray card within a scene and take a meter reading from it, we are assured that the meter is measuring a middle reflectance value, and we can avoid the pitfalls of a single averaged reading of the entire subject...[end quote] In the Section "Exposure Correction," Ansel writes about the K factor: [quote] If pressed, the manufacturers of some exposure meters will acknowledge that they depart from standard calibration of their meters by incorporating a "K factor." This factor is supposed to give a higher percentage of acceptable images under average conditions than a meter calibrated exactly to an 18 percent reflectance. The practical effect of the K factor is that if we make a careful reading from a middle gray surface and expose as indicated, the result will not be exactly a middle gray! [quote] Some years ago I conducted a series of nearly a thousand trials, and found that when a meter is held at the lens and pointed along the lens axis toward the subject,the resulting averaged exposure reading had to be increased in about 85 percent of the cases to meet my demands for shadow density. This effect does not directly relate to the functioning of the meter itself, but has to do with the natural disposition of light and shadow in most subject material. The manufacturers, apparently assuming that meters are most often used for average readings of the entire subject area, take this effect into account by using the K factor. With nearly all meters, this factor is equivalent to giving a one-third stop increase [italics] in exposure. Although preferable to work with what I consider to be the true characteristics of the light and films. Intelligent use of the meter eliminates the need for such artificial aids as the K factor. In the tests described in Appendix 1 [Film Testing Procedures] we offset the effect of the K factor by an adjustment of the film speed. [end quote] In the Zone System, taking a meter reading from the 18% reflectance gray card and calling that Zone V is (only) the starting point. Oliver