kshapero
South Florida Man
I just shot a roll of Trix outdoors with an ND 4 filter on it. Whoops. Never used an ND filter B/W film. What should I expect?
With TTL in camera metering, nothing. With handheld meter or guessing exposure, you give the film two stops less light than required...
Cheers,
Juan
I just shot a roll of Trix outdoors with an ND 4 filter on it. Whoops. Never used an ND filter B/W film. What should I expect?
You mean two stops MORE light...
ND filters are used to control light levels to reduce exposure either to use slower shutter speeds or larger apertures.
Are you sure about that my experience is different? I don't use ND filters very much but I haven't had this as a result.Or to reduce contrast
Cheers,
Juan
I just shot a roll of Trix outdoors with an ND 4 filter on it. Whoops. Never used an ND filter B/W film. What should I expect?
Like Carter, I wonder why a neutral density filter would reduce the contrast. I think the main use of a ND is so that you can use a larger aperture in bright light (to reduce the depth of field) or to slow the shutter speed (to allow fill flash in daylight.)
As far as I know it doesn't affect the tonal range of the film.