|
At my Fine Print Photographer's Workshop I often get requests
to process film and make prints from photographers who have
uprated their film speed. Occasionally this is fully justified:
in situations such as available light interiors, where no
picture would have been possible without a film speed increase,
or to achieve a deliberately stark effect. Usually though
the photographer has uprated for no apparent reason, as though
there were some points to be won by doing so. It's almost
macho to uprate. They even do it when it makes matters more
difficult in taking - when there is glaring sun and an EI
1600 film speed leaves the camera without suitable shutter
speed and aperture combinations. I am sure film manufacturers
are very aware of the sales appeal of high film speeds. There
are few extra sales in claiming that your film is slower than
everybody else's, but probably quite a few if it is claimed
to be high speed and ultra fine grain as well. To be fair,
some major steps have been made in the last decade thanks
to new grain technology. Some ISO 400 films do now have the
grain of the old 125 emulsions, and new 100 emulsions better
the grain of older ultra-slow types. What is more to the point
is whether any of those figures are valid in practice anyway.
I, and many other more expert photographers, have found that
makers' speed ratings don't stand up in practice, and far
from being uprated, they should be downrated. Typically, standard
ISO 400 emulsions work out at about 160, and 125 at 50 or
64 (I exclude T-Max from this). Sceptical readers are probably
right now saying, "Oh yeah" So why do I say this? I mentioned
earlier that exposure meters are set to read any scene as
if it were 'average' or 'middle' grey: the standard 18% reflectance
which manufacturers like Kodak reproduce in their commonly
available grey card. I have a question. Who says that the
average of a typical scene is 18% grey? Nobody I have asked
has been able to tell me how this assumption arose. If it
is incorrect, then we immediately have an error effectively
in the nominal film speed. I believe the correct 'middle grey'
should, in fact, be more like 9%. There is much confusion
about this 'average' or 'middle' terminology as well. When
asked, many of my clients say they visualise it as the exact
mid-point between black and white; the reading given by a
meter pointed at, say, a chessboard with an exactly equal
number of equally sized black and white squares. In fact,
such a scene would give a reading, theoretically, of exactly
half the reflected light of a totally white board. Half the
light means the same as one stop less or one zone less; so,
if pure white is zone X, then the chess board would indicate
zone 1X on the meter, not the stipulated zone V for middle
grey. To get a zone V reading, the chessboard would have to
have around 80% of its area black. Try it with a mock up and
you will see this is so. But is this 18% right anyway? If
the luminance range of a typical photographic scene is around
seven stops - and a surprisingly large proportion do seem
to be - then that is 2.1 in log terms. Half of this is 1.05,
which translates to a reflectance value of around 9%. (If
you're not into sensitometry, take my word for it!) Nevertheless
exposure meters are supposedly set to render anything they
read as standard 18% grey, which is zone V in the zone system.
Since zone 0 is solid black, then we can work out what should
happen at each zone if the maker's speed is as claimed. By
then running a very simple test, we can check if the claim
is right on our own equipment (in a way that will eliminate
all questions about what is real middle grey) and if it isn't
what the correct speed is for us. Makers set film speeds in
a laboratory using laboratory instruments. We work in real
life with ordinary instruments, cameras, enlargers, etc. For
instance, have you ever checked your meter? I have two different
spot meters, a Pentax and a Soligor. The Pentax reads 2/3
stop faster than the Soligor at low levels and 1/2 stop faster
at high levels. My Weston and various camera meters all give
different readings from the same subject under the same light,
but vary differently at different light levels. Similarly,
the llford digital thermometer I use is 1'C adrift from my
Kodak mercury version. When all the other possible variables
in taking and processing, such as shutter speeds, real lens
light transmission compared to marked aperture, flare factors,
lens extension, agitation technique etc, are taken into account
it's not surprising that practice deviates from laboratory
theory.
Continue...
|