Hasselblad H1D Digital Camera User Manual


 
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Hasselblad H1D
Hasselblad H1D
function. By pressing the same button again therefore, the setting will
revert. is means you do not have to remember which button to press
as they will both produce the same desired result in this case.
Zone (system)
e Zone System is a method of combined exposure calculation/lm
development providing a great deal of tonal control. It was originally
devised by Ansel Adams - the classic landscape photographer and
Hasselblad user - and now exists in various forms for both black &
white and colour photography. An integral part of the method includes
the classication and grouping of any given scene into a range of nine
(or ten) so-called zones, hence the name. e method produces a great
degree of result predictability and image tone control.
Concerning the H1D, the word zone refers to the grouping and clas-
sication of various tones, where Zone V is the equivalent (whether
in black & white or colour) to 18% mid-grey on a scale of Zone I
(black) through Zone IX (white). See specic literature for a complete
description of this method.
True exposure
e eective shutter speed for a central lens shutter is dened as the
length of time between the opening and closing when measured at the
half height position when expressed in diagram form (see diagram ).
e fact that it will take some time to open and close the shutter will
have an inuence on the eective shutter speed as the lens aperture
closes to its setting. e faster the shutter opens and closes, the less
this inuence will be. It is also follows that the inuence will be
greater on shorter shutter speeds.
With the lens at full aperture (largest opening), the amount of light
at the lm plane appears as illustrated by the curve in the
diagram. e eective shutter speed then becomes T1. If the lens
is now closed down by one stop, the amount of light appears as il-
lustrated by the curve. e eective shutter speed is now
increased to T2, which is longer that T1. e result is that the exposure
is not reduced by exactly one stop (1EV), however, but slightly less.
At the shorter shutter speeds, the exposure error can be as much as
0,5 – 0,8 EV.
e True exposure mode can compensate for this exposure error since
the behaviour of the shutter is a known and predictable factor. At shut-
ter speeds of 1/150 second or shorter (faster), the camera will shorten
the shutter speed to compensate, as illustrated by the curve.
At the fastest shutter speeds, however, it is not possible to adjust the
shutter speed and so the aperture is adjusted instead.
Although it is probably an infrequently used combination, please
note nevertheless that the fastest shutter speed / minimum aperture
combination cannot be adjusted by True exposure.
White balance
e metering and consequent adjustment for variations in colour
temperature.