BrianShaw said:
I don't know what "hype" you are talking about, jlw. Fred Picker tailored the meter for the needs of LF B&W photographers, who spent lots of time/effort examining the most minor of density differences in exposures in a quest for absolute predictability in density rendering.
Yes, that's exactly the sort of "hype" to which I was referring.
If you were being a tad cynical about 'those types of photographers', then I quite agree with you!
Then we're agreed. In fact, I'm quite cynical about the whole Fred Picker ethos, which I found epitomized in a quote in one of his catalogs: "Never trust 'Rapid' or 'Indicator'
anything."
This sort of blanket condemnation is just ludicrous. It points to a mindset that glories in self-imposed complexity and difficulty, with no regard to whether or not the complexities and difficulties actually produce better
results (you know, photos and stuff...)
I suspect that there's a certain segment of photographers who feel self-conscious about working in what, compared to painting or sculpture or music composition or dance, could be termed a "push-button" artform, and seek to assauge their guilt by cloaking their process in as much techno-mysticism as they can muster.
The notion of re-filtering and re-baffling a one-degree spot meter -- which is going to be used hand-held, and which consequently will produce different measurements
anyway if the photographer aims it a fraction of a degree right or left on two successive readings -- is to me an example of this sort of techno-mysticism. It's just complexity without utility. (Then, having made his nonsensically calibrated reading to 1/10 of a stop, the Pickerographer then sets his measured exposure on a lens which stops down with only 1/3 stop repeatability anyway... but that's another whole minefield of absurdity...)