Thanks James. So does that mean that if I want to do landscapes
with great tonal range I should be using MF film instead of my 10D
or the MK II when it comes? What are your thoughts.
First of all, most of the best landscape photography in the world
is done on slide film, which has pretty much the same dynamic range
as a digital sensor. Secondly, slide film doesn't have nearly the
flexibilility of a RAW file. And thirdly, there is extraordinary
landscape photography (with plenty of tonal range) being done right
now with Canon DSLR. If you want to take landscape photos under
mid-day sunlight, with the expectation of retaining full detail in
shadows and the sky, you'll be pretty disappointed no matter what
medium (slide/negative/digital) you shoot-- although negative film
is going to have the best chance at doing a good job in that
situation. It's your job as a photographer to fit that tonal range
within the range of the medium you've chosen, and that is true of
any medium. Even Ansel Adams, who shot large format black and
white, which has an enormous tonal range, took great care in using
Zone System metering to "place" tonal values on his negatives, then
spent even more time in the wet darkroom bringing those tonal
values onto paper. These days, it is so much easier with digital
because you've eliminated the film processing + film scanning step,
and your image goes directly into your digital darkroom. Just
brush up on your metering technique to capture all the data in a
scene, and learn to process the image correctly. Or simply do what
slide shooters (and negative shooters) have always done: pick your
shooting time to limit dynamic range extremes, know how to read the
light, and use things like neutral density graduated filters. It's
just Landscape Photography 101. Oh, and shoot RAW for maximum
processing flexibility.