vicmortelmans
Well-known
I'm trying to get a grip on some concepts of photography and the zone system. Waiting for getting hold of the book, I'm collecting information from the web and I must say, either I am stupid, or few people really understand about it, but don't hesitaty to write about it.
Just a first step: I understand that the zones defined by Ansel Adams are numbered gray tones from 0 to X. They apply to gray tones as they would be percieved on a print (1). Each next zone is twice as bright as the previous. The middle zone (V) is defined to be as bright as a standardized 'gray card'.
Now, please help me out! A gray card is defined to reflect 18% of the incident light. The reflected light actually defines the brightness of the object. If zone V reflects 18% of the light, and zone VI is twice as bright, it reflects 36% of the light. AM I WRONG? Zone VII 72% and zone VIII 144%... I don't think something can reflect 144% of incident light, can it?
Help me out, how did Adams really define his zones? What did I misunderstand about the words 'brightness', 'reflection', 'tone','gray card',...???
Groeten,
Vic
(1) first very important understanding: a zone is *not* specifying an absolute value of light intensity! Because if you look at a print in sunlight or under a 60W lightbulb, you'll perceive the same gray tones, but the actual light intensity will be quite different!
Just a first step: I understand that the zones defined by Ansel Adams are numbered gray tones from 0 to X. They apply to gray tones as they would be percieved on a print (1). Each next zone is twice as bright as the previous. The middle zone (V) is defined to be as bright as a standardized 'gray card'.
Now, please help me out! A gray card is defined to reflect 18% of the incident light. The reflected light actually defines the brightness of the object. If zone V reflects 18% of the light, and zone VI is twice as bright, it reflects 36% of the light. AM I WRONG? Zone VII 72% and zone VIII 144%... I don't think something can reflect 144% of incident light, can it?
Help me out, how did Adams really define his zones? What did I misunderstand about the words 'brightness', 'reflection', 'tone','gray card',...???
Groeten,
Vic
(1) first very important understanding: a zone is *not* specifying an absolute value of light intensity! Because if you look at a print in sunlight or under a 60W lightbulb, you'll perceive the same gray tones, but the actual light intensity will be quite different!