Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/02/28
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]There are obviously many different approaches that can be used for exposure, development, and printing. Often times methods that seem radically different really boil down to the same thing. The correct one to use is the one that works for you. BTZS tubes are nothing more than an inexpensive but effective development system designed to hold sheet film. In principle any system of development can work with the zone system---you just have to calibrate the delopment times. If you develop all your negatives for the same time/temperature, then you are really using the zone system and have worked out a way where the exposure/development times work for you in your system. i.e. something near the zone system N or N-1/2 development. I do precisely this. Over the years I have adopted a system that many others have taught me. For large format negatives I push and pull the development times to adjust the negative contrast to fit the light I find in the field. Obviously this isn't so easy for 35mm film. However, push processing has the added effect of increasing the grain of the film. For large format film where the degree of enlargement is minimal this is often of little concern. It is however for 35mm film. For 35mm film if I need a little extra contrast in the negative, beyond what can be obtained with the printing paper, I selenium tone the negative. This provides about 1/2 a grade of contrast expansion (N+1/2 in zone system terms). In this case expansion occurs without increasing the grain as much as by doing the same thing using a longer negative development time. To achieve N-1 compression I use the following strategy: I don't worry about it. Unless, the image I just took may be something very special. If there is the slightest possibility that the image of concern is one of my best 10 for the year---I'm going to cut the film and sacrifice a few images to develop properly the image I hope is special. Note that the decision to develop N-1 can usually be decided after the fact, as long as you have given the low values enough exposure which presumably an experience photographer would have done. The decision to tone the negative is also decided much later in the darkroom. Not very scientific but it works for me. Some people get scared off by the zone system because it may sound difficult at first or too artsy. But if you understand what is going on it's probably not too different from what you are already doing---simple commnon sense knowledge of exposure and development. John Hopkins john.hopkins@chemgate.chemsu.edu