[LargeFormat] Snowy Landscapes

TigerShark largeformat@f32.net
Mon Jan 1 07:36:13 2001


If the snow is your most important subject, and you want the snow to be
fully textured (Zone VII) than the metered value of the snow (Zone V) + 2
stops open should do it for you (VII - V = +2 stops open).  Let the other
zones just be where they are; not much you can do about them anyway.

1/3 - 1/2 stop up or down may be a fine tuning.  Also depends on your meter.
A UV or Skylight filter will cut down on the bluish tint (mostly from
(invisible) UV light exposing the blue sensitive layer unproportionatly
more).  No exposure adjustments are necessary for those filters.

TigerShark


-----Original Message-----
From: largeformat-admin@f32.net [mailto:largeformat-admin@f32.net]On
Behalf Of grees@bucks.net
Sent: Monday, January 01, 2001 5:19 AM
To: largeformat@f32.net
Subject: [LargeFormat] Snowy Landscapes


In the UK it has been snowy the last few days and I have been out with
my Pacemaker Speed graphic 4x5 shooting 100ASA Provia using a Weston
Master IV for metering - the question is how much should I bias the
exposure for a snowy scene?  I'd been guessing about +2 stops but unlike
35mm braketing is not practical - any general rules of thumb?

Regards and Thanks

Gareth Rees