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Charlie Lemay
03-27-2011, 13:06
I just posted the ZoneSimple section of my web site with FREE Downloads. It's a way to provide access to this information for former students and anyone else who might be interested in a simple way of applying the Zone System advanced black and white film exposure and development technique. ZoneSimple explains the processes I've been teaching since the mid 90's and provides FREE downloads so anyone can try them out. I teach the Zone System more like cooking than physics with "Recipes" for Sunny Days and Cloudy Days/Open Shade. Once you try it you'll be amazed how much more shadow detail and highlight detail you can achieve using these processes instead of what the manufacturer's tell us to do with their products.

Please pass this link on to anyone else who might be interested in what film can still do.

Enter zonesimple.com or charlielemay.net into your browser window, which takes you to my web site. Click enter, then click ZoneSimple to get the best negatives you can make for darkroom printing or scanning.

pgeobc
03-27-2011, 13:10
Thanks, Charlie. I'll look it over.

JRG
03-27-2011, 14:24
Thanks, Charlie. I too will ponder a bit.

Leigh Youdale
03-27-2011, 14:53
That's pretty neat, Charlie. I have a related question, although it's not directly related to your specific downloads.
I use a couple of Rolleiflex and they have the ability to set an EV and then lock the shutter and aperture together which might make for an interesting application of your charts. However the question in my mind is that I see particular emphasis on light reflectance (which is how most meters work) but nothing on incident metering.
I'm thinking that using an incident meter might overcome a lot of the problems you identify with 'normal' metering?

biakalt
03-27-2011, 15:54
very interesting. im getting to know zone system too. thanks a lot for your efforts!

gb hill
03-27-2011, 16:42
I read the book a few years ago "35mm for the Zone System" or something like that. I found it hard to understand being a novice. I'll give your thoughts a read over...Thanks for this! I need all the help I can get. I'm tired of all my photos looking gray.:) But one problem I need to overcome is that ttl meter!

damien.murphy
03-28-2011, 01:09
Thanks Charlie, will have a look over it. Has come at the right time, as I give the M3 a respite from the shelf

Leigh Youdale
03-28-2011, 01:42
I read the book a few years ago "35mm for the Zone System" or something like that. I found it hard to understand being a novice. I'll give your thoughts a read over...Thanks for this! I need all the help I can get. I'm tired of all my photos looking gray.:) But one problem I need to overcome is that ttl meter!

I think that's probably the one I have - "Zone System for 35mm Photographers" by Carson Graves. It's very detailed and seeks to translate the Ansel Adams 'system' from LF to 35mm use. Big problem is the 36 exposures to a roll that we live with rather than single sheet film packs. I'm sure the information in it is OK but difficult to use for all but the most dedicated.

I think what Charlie has offered is a very useful "rule of thumb" approach which is much easier to apply, although he does talk of having two bodies and exposing and developing differently for bright sunny days and cloudy days. I think Les McLean advocates a similar approach but if I remember correctly in his case he uses an MF (maybe Hasselblad) with different film backs to achieve the same result. See his books "Creative Black & White Photography" and "Creative Exposure Control". Good reading, both, but Charlie's simplified approach is certainly worth a try in my opinion, especially if you have and can be bothered to carry two bodies.

Leigh Youdale
03-28-2011, 04:28
If I've understood what Charlie is driving at, it's a simplified version of the following - but he's approached it from a different angle. What I've set out below would work best with a spot meter - definitely NOT an averaging meter. Charlie has used the Sunny 16 rule of thumb as his basis rather than a meter reading. No reason why it wouldn't work just fine.

His "Sunny Day" exposure table is effectively the same as metering at box speed for the shadows and opening up two stops. (High Contrast Scene)
His "Extreme Sunny Day" is the same but opening up four stops. (Very High Contrast Scene).
He then compensates for the overexposure of highlights by cutting the development time to 64% of base time or 40% of base time respectively.

You could just as easily have a "Not So Extreme Sunny Day" and open up by only three stops and adjust the development time by three steps of 20% each to arrive at approximately 51% of base time.

His "Cloudy Day" exposures (Low Contrast Scene) are based on box speed and metering off a grey card or the palm of the hand and opening up one stop. He compensates for this amount of overexposure by cutting the development time to 80% of base time.

I may have it wrong but that's what it looks like to me.

Charlie Lemay
03-28-2011, 08:03
Thanks all.

An incident meter works fine, but you will still have to use a new ISO to get the same results. I actually add 20% development on cloudy days, to get more density in the highlights.

I personally shoot Sunny Day extreme for nearly all my film work and use predominantly Fuji Acros.

Charlie Lemay
03-28-2011, 14:34
Leigh,

When I began teaching myself the Zone System, it didn't take long to realize that when you use a incident meter on a sunny day, you just keep getting the same reading over and over again, because the light isn't changing accept at the beginning and the end of day, or when clouds pass in front of the Sun. In open shade your incident meter is likely to read a bright sky leading to under exposure. This is why I prefer to use the Sunny 16 rule and meter the way I do. My students all have Pentax K-1000 camera's that the School provides, so that is another reason for doing things the way I've suggested. Why carry an additional meter, if there is already one in the camera that can be made to yield a reading equivalent to an incident reading. If you're using a medium or large format camera without a meter then taking a meter along isn't necessary at all on a sunny day, if you want to shoot in full sunlight and get much more detail.

david.elliott
03-28-2011, 16:14
Charlie,

Thank you for the links to your simplified zone system.

Quick question. How do you handle indoor lighting with your system?

Leigh Youdale
03-28-2011, 16:48
I actually add 20% development on cloudy days, to get more density in the highlights.


Yep, sorry. I didn't read your Process notes carefully enough! So it's 120% x base time.

[QUOTE: ....... when you use a incident meter on a sunny day, you just keep getting the same reading over and over again, because the light isn't changing except at the beginning and the end of day, or when clouds pass in front of the Sun. In open shade your incident meter is likely to read a bright sky leading to under exposure. This is why I prefer to use the Sunny 16 rule and meter the way I do. QUOTE]

Yep. That makes sense.

[QUOTE:Why carry an additional meter, if there is already one in the camera that can be made to yield a reading equivalent to an incident reading? If you're using a medium or large format camera without a meter then taking a meter along isn't necessary at all on a sunny day if you want to shoot in full sunlight and get much more detail. QUOTE]

So if conditions change, I take it you either stop taking images until full sun returns or you switch to your cloudy day method using a second body???

Charlie Lemay
03-29-2011, 03:55
David, I use the Studio Lighting recipe. Halve the ISO for 1 stop more exposure and 20% less development time.

charjohncarter
03-29-2011, 07:02
Thanks Charles, I will be on your site in five minutes.

charjohncarter
03-29-2011, 10:35
You did not explain why you cannot use Tmax type films with this method.

atlcruiser
03-29-2011, 12:47
Very well done..thanks for putting this all in one spot!

I do more or less the same thing with harsh, soft, normal, low and very low light as my catgories with ASA ranging from 100 to 1600 and times in tank from 14 min to one hour (rodial). I will read your info in more detail and refine and practice :)

I have been known to carry 2 bodies one loaded for harsh light, 100 asa, and another for very soft/dark, either 200 or 400 asa. This works very well outdoors in bright sun tha provides deep shadows as well.

Chriscrawfordphoto
03-29-2011, 13:31
I've read it all, and honestly it is just so much easier and more consistent to just do it right by using a spotmeter and metering the shadows for exposure and the light tones for developing.

Charlie's system for sunny days is just guessing and simply doesn't work. A lot of the time, you'll get lucky and get the shot, but if you need consistent perfect results, no exceptions, you'll eventually get burned. The Sunny f16 rule is worthless in my experience because the actual brightness of full sun varies considerably in different parts of the world, even different parts of the USA. Here in northern Indiana, bright sun is a stop dimmer than it is in New Mexico (where I lived for a couple years).

The fact is that if you want to do it right, there is no substitute, no shortcut, for old fashioned hard work.

FrankS
03-29-2011, 13:42
Chris, it is presented as a simplified system. I'm not sure you can make a blanket statement that it "simply doesn't work". There are examples given that show that it does.

Sunny 16 does work and is consistent in the temperate latitudes, not so much in the polar or equatorial regions, or regions at high altitudes or in highly industrialized regions.

BillBingham2
03-29-2011, 13:58
Charlie,

Where do you teach?

Great site, I've got to dive into it but at first scan it looks really good.

Next year my oldest son will be taking photography in High School, I can not wait.

B2

david.elliott
03-29-2011, 16:48
Thanks Charlie!

Charlie Lemay
03-29-2011, 17:08
John,
The reason T-Max doesn't work is this technique only seems to work with silver halide emulsions. I tried it with T-max and the images loose sharpness and the midtones get mushy.

Chris,
I've been doing this system myself since 1982, in places like the mountains of New Hampshire and the deserts of Egypt. What you say about the light being different is a myth. The Sun is 93,000,000 miles away. Light is the same everywhere except at very high altitudes. The rest of the difference can be accounted for by reflectance of sand, water, snow, etc. That's the stuff that fools meters, but it does not fool the Sunny 16 Rule. Your just debunking this different approach if you condemn it without trying it. It's not for everyone. I just put it out there for those who would like to improve the scale of their negatives without having to be so technical.

I teach at St, Paul's School in Concord, NH.

atlcruiser
03-29-2011, 17:13
I've read it all, and honestly it is just so much easier and more consistent to just do it right by using a spotmeter and metering the shadows for exposure and the light tones for developing.

Charlie's system for sunny days is just guessing and simply doesn't work. A lot of the time, you'll get lucky and get the shot, but if you need consistent perfect results, no exceptions, you'll eventually get burned. The Sunny f16 rule is worthless in my experience because the actual brightness of full sun varies considerably in different parts of the world, even different parts of the USA. Here in northern Indiana, bright sun is a stop dimmer than it is in New Mexico (where I lived for a couple years).

The fact is that if you want to do it right, there is no substitute, no shortcut, for old fashioned hard work.


Here you have a successful teacher/photographer who put out a thoughtful, well written guide to the 'simple" zone system. Way to trash him! Good constructive comments!


One stop difference in sun from norther to southern latitudes reall makes no difference. If one were in Nome, Alaska then yes there would be a difference.


How does anything written have anything to do with hard work? You seem to imply that if one does not do it as you do then they are lazy and cannot turn out a perfect product such as yourself.

The system listed in not a catch all for all folks in all situations but it is very close to how I was taught and I am sure many others expose in much the same way. Seems to work for many of us but, as such a lazy group turing out poorly exposed negatives, we get no credit. :bang:

Keith
03-29-2011, 17:38
The Sun is 93,000,000 miles away. Light is the same everywhere except at very high altitudes. The rest of the difference can be accounted for by reflectance of sand, water, snow, etc. That's the stuff that fools meters, but it does not fool the Sunny 16 Rule


That makes a lot of sense ... thanks Charlie. I've bookmarked your site for reference.

:)

bennett2136
03-29-2011, 17:51
Thanks for writing this Charlie!

I took a black and white film photography class at UVM last semester and loved it but, it was pretty basic. Unfortunately, I have to declare an art major to take a more advanced photo class :confused:. I really appreciate teachers like you helping to make knowledge like this available without advanced photo classes! Do you know of any other books or literature that would help me with the finer points of B/W photography?

Thanks, Bennett

jordanstarr
03-29-2011, 17:52
Charlie...
You did a great job to simplify the zone system and I think I speak for many when I say thanks for doing so. It's a very helpful tool and you gave people who may not understand the zone system something to think about, which is great.

However, I have a few concerns. Terms like "sunny day", "sunny day extreme" and "cloudy day" are subjective, so attaching a blanket rule like open up two stops or close down one stop on such n' such a day is going to produce different results for everyone. Also, as we all know, You and me can use this same method and even use the same developer and film and come out with different results because of human error and judgement in mixing chemicals, agitation methods, age of the chemicals, etc. So, the developing times you suggest are good starting points, but will be different for everyone. That being said, I think your summary is a fantastic starting point and will point people in the right direction to think about their exposures and developing methods. There's many different ways to get great results and even though I use a slightly different version of the zone system than you do, I imagine we're coming out with similar results. That small critic may be completely redundant as most film photographers already know this, including yourself.

The key is obviously, "expose for shadows, develop for highlights". Everyone will tweak this method for their own taste and judgement. Using the zone system with 35mm is all about averaging and guessing anyway. Unless you shoot a whole roll on a specific scene with a specific light signature, much of it is educated guesswork, experimenting and bracketing. It's especially difficult to apply the zone system in NYC and similar cities, where the tall buildings create complete shade one block and the next it would be sunny.

Charlie Lemay
03-29-2011, 18:12
Bennett,

i always liked the Henry Horenstein books.

Charlie Lemay
03-29-2011, 18:13
Thanks Jordan.

Charlie Lemay
03-29-2011, 18:15
Thanks Keith.

charjohncarter
03-29-2011, 18:26
Thanks for that on the Tmax films, I do not like them when way (2 stops) overexposed; and under development does not solve anything. I always overexpose TriX (1 stop) and develop it to my taste. I will try 2 stops and cut back development, but I worry that this will only work with carefully chosen scenes.

Chriscrawfordphoto
03-29-2011, 18:44
John,
The reason T-Max doesn't work is this technique only seems to work with silver halide emulsions. I tried it with T-max and the images loose sharpness and the midtones get mushy.

Chris,
I've been doing this system myself since 1982, in places like the mountains of New Hampshire and the deserts of Egypt. What you say about the light being different is a myth. The Sun is 93,000,000 miles away. Light is the same everywhere except at very high altitudes. The rest of the difference can be accounted for by reflectance of sand, water, snow, etc. That's the stuff that fools meters, but it does not fool the Sunny 16 Rule. Your just debunking this different approach if you condemn it without trying it. It's not for everyone. I just put it out there for those who would like to improve the scale of their negatives without having to be so technical.

I teach at St, Paul's School in Concord, NH.

I've lived all over the country and seen the differences in light. The raw sun itself is the same in brightness (at least at the same time of day) in different places, but as Frank said earlier, factors like atmospheric pollution (he referred to industrialized areas, like the city I live in now) and altitude (I lived in Santa Fe at 7000 feet) affect the actual brightness, which is why you should use a meter. Your system for cloudy days is good and is basically the same as using an incident light meter (the same exposure corrections are needed with an incident meter, but I don't expand development...that's more of a personal decision based on the contrast desired though). My objection was just to the sunny day directions, which seem to be basically guesswork since I know from many years of experience that ACTUAL brightness of sun, once filtered through our atmosphere, does vary from place to place. If users measured light with a grey card or incident meter then applied your exposure/development corrections, I'd not have complained about your recommendations. They're different than my working methods, which depend on a spotmeter and more traditional zone system methodology, but incident meters or grey cards work great. Phil Davis described a similar system in his Beyond The Zone System books, but he made it sound harder than it is. You made it more accessible to ordinary photographers, which is awesome.

The reason Tmax films don't work may be because they have less lattitude for small exposure errors or developing time differences. Also, I have found Tmax films need different corrections in dev. time for contrast changes than normal films like Tri-X...if you use the same exposure/developing changes for them as for a non-tmax type film you'll probably get bad results like you mentioned. I think it would work if you experimented with exposure and developing with them and found the 'right' corrections for those films.

I was in the middle of something else when I wrote my first post and should have slowed down and written that the sunny day stuff was all I was saying I didn't like.

Leigh Youdale
03-29-2011, 18:49
I admire much of Chris's work and I also appreciate Charlie's contribution here. Without wishing to start any arguments I have a copy of a third option I obtained a while back from Doremus Scudder. It no longer appears on his website but it continues to use metering and relies on variable contrast printing papers - so maybe no good for the scanners and inkjet printers amongst us. But you could try it. It also is less extreme than Charlie's method in that it only goes for one or two stops of overexposure rather than the two to four stops.

It'll make a long post so I've cut a few bits out, but here it is for what it's worth. Maybe if you were to contact Doremus he'd send a full copy. I might add that he advocates a standard development time. I've discovered to my joy that using Presyscol EF I can develop different types and speeds of film in the same tank for the same time (12 mins) and get excellent results every time.
.................................................. .............................
I guess this is copyright to Doremus Scudder.

In this system there is only one "Normal" development time; different contrast negatives are dealt with by changing paper grades.

First, with small film, you should standardize your negative contrast to print well on a slightly higher contrast grade paper, say 2 1/2 or 3 (I'd use grade 3 as a standard for 35mm film, 2 1/2 for MF roll film). This allows the negatives to be developed to a smaller density range and decreases grain.

Next, decide how you want to meter, either "placing the shadows" or using the "averaging method" along with an in-camera meter (center-weighted meters are remarkably good for most subjects).

If you choose to "place the shadows," then meter an important shadow and place it on the appropriate Zone, e.g., Zone III for blacks with detail or Zone IV for "luminous" fully detailed shadows. Do your E.I. and development tests to arrive at "Normal" development and then use that development time for everything. With this metering technique, you should overexpose scenes with low contrast, i.e., place the shadows higher by a Zone, making sure that the high values do not go past Zone VIII. You can meter the highlights to be sure, but with experience you can accurately identify a low-contrast situation and know when to overexpose without taking the time to meter the highlights to see where they fall. This overexposure gets the shadow values up higher on the film's characteristic curve and gives more separation than less exposure. For very contrasty scenes, just place the shadows as normal and shoot away. The negs will be contrasty, but most films retain adequate separation up to Zone XII and beyond. Just print with a lower contrast grade paper. (This may influence you film choice, since some "retro" or "traditional" films don't hold values in the densest areas as well, but 90% of them do.)

If you decide to use the "averaging" metering method using an in-camera meter (my choice for working quickly, even leaving the camera on "auto" in some situations), you should determine E.I. and "Normal" development time with that method. With this metering technique, you need to recognize contrasty situations (as opposed to recognizing the low-contrast situations using the "place the shadows method") and then overexpose one stop for high-contrast situations and two stops for extremely high contrast situations (this seems counter-intuitive at first, but is quite logical and correct in this system). You overexpose high-contrast scenes because your meter will tend to expose for a middle value that results in dropping the shadow values. Overexposing compensates for this. You end up with the same contrasty negative that you would get "placing the shadows" and print it on low-contrast paper. Note that the averaging meter will automatically place shadows higher than normal in a low-contrast situation. This is exactly what you want to get the most separation in the low values (and why you overexpose low-contrast scenes with the "place the shadows" method). Of course, you need to intelligently use your averaging meter and apply appropriate compensation for high-key or low-key subjects (this in addition to the overexposure you will give for contrasty scenes).

You can even determine N+ and N- development times for those (rather rare) instances when the entire roll is exposed with scenes of the same contrast. These times would be determined with classic Zone System tests, but I would tend to rely on paper grade for expansions as much as possible with small film unless I really liked grain (which I don't). For really contrasty situations, compensating developing techniques (such as compensating or highly-dilute developer and/or stand or semi-stand techniques) would be my choice for small film.

Of course, you may also want to shoot entire rolls in low light and use classic "push-processing" (which is simply underexposing and overdeveloping with the expected loss of shadow detail and increase in contrast) for that "look" as well. In this case, you would rate your film higher and increase development.

Nokton48
03-29-2011, 19:14
Thanks for that on the Tmax films, I do not like them when way (2 stops) overexposed; and under development does not solve anything. I always overexpose TriX (1 stop) and develop it to my taste. I will try 2 stops and cut back development, but I worry that this will only work with carefully chosen scenes.

This is about what I do and I am not too often dissapointed, although it does happen from time to time. I think this is really good advice, works for me.

gb hill
03-29-2011, 19:20
I think that's probably the one I have - "Zone System for 35mm Photographers" by Carson Graves. It's very detailed and seeks to translate the Ansel Adams 'system' from LF to 35mm use. Big problem is the 36 exposures to a roll that we live with rather than single sheet film packs. I'm sure the information in it is OK but difficult to use for all but the most dedicated.

I think what Charlie has offered is a very useful "rule of thumb" approach which is much easier to apply, although he does talk of having two bodies and exposing and developing differently for bright sunny days and cloudy days. I think Les McLean advocates a similar approach but if I remember correctly in his case he uses an MF (maybe Hasselblad) with different film backs to achieve the same result. See his books "Creative Black & White Photography" and "Creative Exposure Control". Good reading, both, but Charlie's simplified approach is certainly worth a try in my opinion, especially if you have and can be bothered to carry two bodies.
Yes that is the book. I should probably read it again. I'll check out the other two books you mentioned. Thanks.

gb hill
03-29-2011, 19:25
Has anyone tried this using HC-110 instead of D-76 or Sprint developer?

Chriscrawfordphoto
03-29-2011, 20:23
Has anyone tried this using HC-110 instead of D-76 or Sprint developer?

Greg you can do this, or any other exposure/dev system, with any developer but the Developing times and EIs to use would vary depending on the developer, so you'd have to test it.

rockman525
03-29-2011, 20:38
There are many, many ways to skin a cat.

The majority of photographers who frequent this forum are passionate about their art and their film. They frequent this forum because it is an invaluable source of other peoples knowledge, and their failures as well. We all want the the same thing...to put on a negative what we see, what we feel, to capture "that" light we each know intimately in the places we live. We try to do this with hundreds of different cameras, a thousand lenses, different films, variable iso's, developers from Accutane to God- Knows -What, different dev times, temperatures of 18c to 30c, shake it good once a minute or just let it sit for a couple of hours, rinse continually in the waters of the Ganges, or just use the tap!

Yet from this forum I get two constants, two stars I can follow... the quality of the images displayed here and the infinite numbers of ways to achieve them.

Charlie has tried to define a system that works for him and he thinks it might work for some other people. He has tried to reduce the mind numbing variables that can turn film photography into a cerebral checkmate. I appreciate the careful thought and effort he has put into it and I must give his earnest work an objective review. Charlatan's don't work that hard. I'll try his method, and see if it works for me. I'll try with my cameras and my film and my developers and my water and my clocks and my scanner and my light and my subjects and my eyes. The only guarantee I have is that I know I will be a better photographer for the effort.

Thanks Charlie.

Leigh Youdale
03-29-2011, 20:40
Has anyone tried this using HC-110 instead of D-76 or Sprint developer?

Never used HC-110. I looked at the MDC to see if some interpolation could be attempted but none of the listings there go down to such low ISO values as Charlie is advocating, so it's not much help.

The MDC lists TX400 in D76 1+1 as -
@ ISO400 9.75 mins
@ ISO200 9.5 mins and
@ ISO50 it gives 7 mins.

At ISO400 HC-110 MDC gives - well, let's pick 7.5 mins.
At ISO200 HC-110 is listed variously at 4.75 to 6.75 mins.

So with HC-110 a lot depends on the dilution you choose but it seems it would give times of between 68% and 96% of the D76 times. Maybe try 75% as a starting point and go up or down depending on the first results. I guess if you want to use HC-110 you're going to have to experiment and maybe sacrifice a couple of rolls of film.

So, for TX400 on a "Sunny Day" rated at ISO100 Charlie is suggesting the equivalent of 64% of base time. That's 64% of 9.5 or just about right on 6 mins in D76. Agrees with his charts.

Interpolate that to HC-110 and it could be about 4.5 mins. After that I think you just have to experiment. Maybe just shoot a whole roll of film without caring what the images are, cut it in four while preparing to load the tank (half length then half again) and develop each section for a different time - say 4.0, 4.5, 5.0 and 5.5 minutes.

Charlie Lemay
03-30-2011, 05:20
Chris,

You seem to be hing up on the label I'm using. I'm not sure we disagree on the principles. One should never use either "Sunny Day" recipe if there is anything but direct, unmitigated sunlight the moment you make an exposure. My beginning students will often ask me before they go out to shoot during class time, "Mr. Lemay, is it a Sunny Day." My response is always the same. "That's a call you have to make." It's not a weather thing, it means you have to be aware of whether or not the Sun is actually at full strength. I teach them not to look at the Sun, but to look at shadows instead and to recognize that when they are hard edged and deep, the Sun is unobstructed. If the shadows are softer and weaker, then I advise them to stop photographing. Obviously this kind of approach is less suited to event related photography, or even travel photography, where you only get one chance to make an image. If they are going to shoot under varied conditions, I advise my students to follow the directions on the box. They won't get the same amount of shadow and highlight detail, and each negative will be a different adventure in the darkroom or scanner, but they will record something. Most memorable photos do not use the Zone System. Countless great photographers don't use it either. Ralph Gibson in particular comes to mind. That said, if you can use it, and it is easier to accommodate the process in art making, the benefit will be consistency in your negatives, extended tonal range and shortened time in the darkroom or post processing. Any other conditions modifying direct sunlight should have their own EV, and are not going to be optimized using either "Sunny Day" recipe.

charjohncarter
03-30-2011, 07:01
Charles, thanks starting this discussion. You have, at least for me, given me some things to think about. I generally use the method that L quoted, but I will give your method a try. Here in California we have long periods of completely clear blue sky, so no problem. It seems if there is an argument here, it is where we place the shadow detail Zone on the H-D curve and then how to cut back development. I hope we have more threads like this, I learn something from every one of them.

Charlie Lemay
03-30-2011, 12:49
Thanks John,

I hope people who do try this system out post their images and comment about how this might differ from what they normally get from their negatives, especially the 4 stop Extreme Sunny Day recipe. I'll post a couple images one Cloudy Day, "Starry Stream" and one Sunny Day Extreme, "Ceremony".

Shane
04-04-2011, 05:14
Thanks for this.

charjohncarter
04-16-2011, 10:09
I tried your method and I did fairly well for the first go. I used f/5.6 at 1/1000 only for the whole roll. Everything is as you said. I'll have to try another roll, as I feel that selection of subject is very important.

filmfan
04-16-2011, 10:43
Thanks for the zone system simplification. Great stuff.

Also, I live in a high-altitude town (Boulder, CO) and I was wondering about the sunny-16 exposure rule... sometimes I get overexposed negs even when shooting f/16 and 1/125 second with ISO 100 film. Would it be possible that sunny-16 here is actually sunny-22?

hendriphile
04-16-2011, 12:36
This post and ensuing discussion are part of what make this site so special.

Charlie Lemay
04-19-2011, 07:05
Filmfan. In order to get an ideal negative using the Sunny 16 rule, you have to use a slower ISo than the manufacturer's recommended ISO. They seem to rate their films for open shade, so they lose a lot of detail at both ends in bright sun. Try one of my recipes and you will see that it works. Charjohn. It's not so much that different subjects respond differently as it is the way light and shade separates tones in the composition. I had a student once who made an image of a buffalo against the light and then complained that the Zone System didn't work when there was no separation in the hairs. Cross lighting is still the best way to show texture whether you are using the Zone System or not.

shadowfox
04-19-2011, 12:03
Charlie, thank you for your generosity in sharing your expertise.

One of the books that I consider easy to read to learn Zone System is "Film & Digital Techniques for Zone System Photography" by Glenn Rand.

But I shall give your recipes a try and report the results.

alistair.o
04-24-2011, 00:43
Very interesting and useful Charlie - thanks for your work.

Regards

Al

bigeye
04-24-2011, 04:06
Great work, Charlie! The concentration on seeing light, for both the exposure/development and composition is excellent for training (and retraining) the basics. It's a complete, clear 'start' on how and what to consider. Very nice.

Many writhe in the starched collar of the Zone System and other formulaic methods, but as teaching methods for students, they do communicate the full nature of light, the set of tools and their use. I like how you emphasize 'seeing' to the formulas.

From where you leave off, you burn film, build experience and create your own best methods.

- C

Charlie Lemay
04-24-2011, 17:26
Thaks C. and Al.

raytoei@gmail.com
05-01-2011, 11:06
Charlie,

does your most excellent film development also work with other developers like xtol ? I use Plus-X and have a fresh brew of XTOL.

thanks

raytoei

Charlie Lemay
05-02-2011, 04:59
Raytoel,

I would think so as long as you compensate -20% for each stop you open up on the iS0. I've done it successfully with Rodinal, Sprint, Ilford developer and D76 1 tp 1 and HC110 dilution B.

Charlie

aldobonnard
05-02-2011, 05:22
Hi Charlie,
I just read this thread now (bit late...); the internet site www.charlielemay.net (http://www.charlielemay.net) does not respond; is this the correct hyperlink? I'd be glad to read you.
Thanks

Charlie Lemay
05-02-2011, 17:11
aldo,

I just clicked on your link and it took me right to the site. Must have somthing to do with your connection.

Charlie

aldobonnard
05-03-2011, 01:40
Hi charlie,
indeed :-)
Sorry for the question, many thanks !