jaffa_777
Established
I am interested to know your method of exposure and developing mainly for B&W. Every one seems to have their methods of determining exposure from simple to elaborate.
The reason I ask is that the method I use seems to get me good to great results most of the time, but I am not sure I really understad why?
My method is with films like trix and hp5, -
* put my incedent meter at around 200-320. (200 for a more contrasty scene, 320 for a flatter scene).
* use the incident meter in the shadow areas of the scene to determine my shutter speed at my desired depth of field.
* shoot.
* note the speed down on the film and give to my pro lab to develop
*scan on nikon 9000 for large inkjet prints
When I read peoples different methods of determing exposure for a well balenced neg, their are so many different views and methods, it seems like we are all taking different round abouts to end up at the same destination?
Whats your method and how does it work for you?
The reason I ask is that the method I use seems to get me good to great results most of the time, but I am not sure I really understad why?
My method is with films like trix and hp5, -
* put my incedent meter at around 200-320. (200 for a more contrasty scene, 320 for a flatter scene).
* use the incident meter in the shadow areas of the scene to determine my shutter speed at my desired depth of field.
* shoot.
* note the speed down on the film and give to my pro lab to develop
*scan on nikon 9000 for large inkjet prints
When I read peoples different methods of determing exposure for a well balenced neg, their are so many different views and methods, it seems like we are all taking different round abouts to end up at the same destination?
Whats your method and how does it work for you?