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commonly used in your facility; for example, when awards presentations are commonly photographed using syncro-sun techniques with a medium-format camera and Kodak VPS film, then your standard negative should be taken under the same conditions. The same applies for studio portraits, indoor on-camera flash photography, and so forth. A basic enlarger filter pack should be determined for each negative. differences can be caused by normal manufacturing variations from one emulsion to another, adverse conditions before exposure, illumination of different color quality, variance in sensitivity with changes in illumination level and exposure time (reciprocity effect), adverse storage conditions between exposure and processing (latent image loss), and nonstandard processing conditions. identically. Differences may result from variations in lighting conditions (time of day, sky conditions, etc.), film emulsions, film processing, or other factors. These differences are normal and should be expected. The standard negative provides a good starting point for 60Y and exposed the print for 10 seconds at f/5.6. The enlarger settings should remain the same as a starting point for similar negatives, providing the same type of paper is used. For a particular production negative, you may find it necessary to add a 10M filter to the pack and adjust the printing time to 11 seconds to compensate for the differences between the new negative and the standard negative. In other words, the new negative may filter and a 10-percent increase in printing time. imaging facility where you work. A photo lab that makes occasional color prints probably uses only a standard negative and color printing viewing filters. Larger Navy imaging facilities that produce large quantities of custom color printing may use evaluation methods involving instruments, such as color analyzers, densitometers, and other electronic devices. negative evaluation, the reference areas must have the same subject matter in all the negatives; for example, a gray card included in the picture, a flesh tone, the highlighted area of an aircraft wing, or a neutral area of a ship, all provide a suitable reference area. In portraiture, a medium-flesh tone is often selected In other fields of photography, you should either include a gray card in the scene or expose an additional negative replacing the subject with a gray card. In the latter case, the negative with the gray card is used only for evaluation purposes and is replaced by the subject negative when the print is made. all skin tones the same as the standard negative regardless of variations in skin color or lighting. Similarly, all images of a gray card tend to be printed alike regardless of the position of the card relative to the main light. printing. The standard negative is used as a reference when color analyzing instruments are used. There are two categories of color analyzers: off-easel and on- easel. placed in the enlarger. Commonly in Navy imaging facilities, off-easel evaluation is accomplished using a densitometer. The main advantage of using a densitometer is you can service a number of enlargers. That is especially useful when you cannot have on-easel analyzers for each color enlarger. Another advantage, off-easel evaluation can be done under normal room lighting conditions. standard negative on a transmission densitometer. You read the reference patch through a red, green, and blue filter. The densitometer provides you with direct density in the reference patch. The values that you read from the reference pack are then added to the known standard Basic Photography Course |
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