this post was submitted on 15 Apr 2025
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Photography
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Thanks to your answer I understand a little bit better how to make use of different formats and techniques.
Thank you for that! But since I only shoot analogue, there’s a lot in your answer I can’t put to use. Since the sky is completely white anyway, could it be a solution to use a longer time so more light from the shadows gets to the film? Or will this fuck up the contrast completely?
That can work, but the bright area starts leech in to the dark areas.
If you're looking for an analogue solution, your best bet is a graduated neutral density filter. It's pretty much designed for this exact scenario. It's a filter that sits on your lens. Half of it is grey (like sunglasses, but without impacting the colour tone) and half of it is clear. You can rotate it around and align it with the light/dark boundary in your subject. It will reduce the light from the bright area of your subject, whilst leaving the dark part of your subject unaltered. This will let you expose longer for the shadows without blowing out your skies.