If you have a light meter try metering and then putting the gel filter in
front of the meter to see it makes a difference in the reading. There is
likely some difference, whether or not its significant is the question.
Gord
On Tue, 18 Jun 2002, Shannon Stoney wrote:
> Hi. I have this #8 gel filter that I've been putting in my pinhole camera.
> At first I thought that it wouldn't make any difference as to exposure
> times, but now I think it does. I had read that you don't have to make any
> compensation for the #8, but I have noticed that it depresses the shadows a
> bit. I wonder if anybody else has noticed this and if you make an exposure
> compensation when you use it.
>
> --shannon
>
>
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---------------------------------------------------------
Gordon J. Holtslander Dept. of Biology
holtsg@duke.usask.ca 112 Science Place
http://duke.usask.ca/~holtsg University of Saskatchewan
Tel (306) 966-4433 Saskatoon, Saskatchewan
Fax (306) 966-4461 Canada S7N 5E2
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Received on Wed Jun 19 00:52:38 2002
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