
Originally Posted by
Pere Casals
Great !!!
I'd recommend you meter the effective Lux you have on the easel before you place a filter or the negative. In this way we always have a solid reference when changing the lens or the head height, you may try to work always with same power on the easel. Me, I dim (electronically) the light power to have always 2 Lux on the easel after stopping the lens, I use the Lux meter for that. A Lux meter is $20, telling 0.01 Lux precision.
later I may vary time or power, but if always starting with a known power all it's easier.
You may spot meter on the projection. Imagine that you place a label in each step of the test contact copies with the Lux.Seconds each step received, if you then if you spot meter on the projection of the negative then you get the Lux.Second and you know the gray level.
There are several ways to do that, with different kinds of exposimeter, the important thing is that you do that in a consistent way. IMHO this is very useful because you may end making 1/8 of the test strips.
Problem with BW is that making test strips is very easy. RA-4 printers had to learn to meter accurately on the easel because making many color test strips was a mess.
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