Photo_Smith
Well-known
This is - as already told to you - one of the most beautiful portraits I ever saw.
Too bad there is something looking like a scratch on the negative (might be scanner banding as well).
Not too sure if the "emerging shadow" metering technique (which sounds a bit complicated to use in the field when your subject has no patience or is prone to get away so that you have to meter in a PDQ manner) is mandatory there. Metering on the area between the nose and the mouth would have provided the same results IMO.
Or incident metering by placing the meter in front of the eye which is in focus ?
Yet - again, what a lovely photograph. Congrats.
I scan on a cheap scanner (V500) just for showing on the internet, the scan took just a min or two with no retouching; I print on paper with an enlarger normally Adox.
The scratch is a scanline due to dust in the calibration area.
The shadow meter method is simple in the field I have a spotmeter, I place it on the parts under trees and bushes then stop down 2 stops to place them in the toe so I keep the appearance of grain down in the mid tones it's easy and only takes a second.
Metering from the face (which I also did) would have boosted the shadows and given +4 stops to the exposure which would boost grain in the zone IV to VI) basically the skin tones would look gritty rather than smooth.
Thanks for your words.