Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/02/28
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]>>>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<<< With all due respect, this isn't remotely "the Zone System." This is the system worked out by C.E. Kenneth Mees and Loyd [sic--that's how he spelled it] Jones of Kodak in the 1930s, whereby average exposure and average development are given sufficient for most outdoor pictorial subjects with final image contrast being controlled by way of of paper grade. The Zone System is a specific method of controlling negative density by means of materials testing, spot area measurement, and control of development for achiving an optimum CI for a given paper and "place and fall" interpretation of scene luminances. The "Zone System" is a specific, defined method. It is not just a fancy way of saying "intelligent exposure and development control." The Zone System itself is not very precise. To name just a few inconsistencies, the concept of "N" is arbitrary, film speed point changes with development (this is not controlled for in the Zone System) and to different degrees with different films, and plus and minus development is averaged. It should be remembered that Ansel Adams was already a very experienced photographer by the time he and Fred Archer formulated his system...and most so-called "Zone System" photographers also have made adjustments based on their own practices and experiences. There really is an incredible amount of misinformation floating around out there, and there always will be, I guess. This is not to denigrate anyone's exposure control or personal methods, most of which work well. - --Mike