Zone Description
The following description is obtained from the book, The Negative by Ansel Adams.
Zone | Description |
0 | Total black in print. No useful density in the negative other than film base + fog. |
I | Effective threshold. First step above complete black in print, with slight tonality but no texture. |
II | First suggestion of texture. Deep tonalities, representing the darkest part of the image in which some slight detail is required. |
III | Average dark materials and low values showing adequate texture. This is a very important zone in determining the exposure. |
IV | Average dark foliage, dark stone, or landscape shadow. Normal shadow value for Caucasian skin portraits in sunlight. |
V | Middle gray (18% reflectance). Clear north sky as rendered by panchromatic film, dark skin gray stone, average weathered wood. |
VI | Average Caucasian skin value in sunlight, diffuse skylight or artificial light. Light stone, shadows on snow in sunlit landscapes, clear north sky on panchromatic film with light blue filter. |
VII | Very light skin, light gray objects; average snow with acute side lighting. |
VIII | Whites with texture and delicate values; textured snow; highlights on Caucasian skin. This is another important zone in determining the development time. |
IX | White without texture approaching pure white, thus comparable to Zone I in its slight tonality without true texture. Snow in flat sunlight. With small-format negatives printed with condenser enlarger, Zone IX may print as pure white not distinguishable from Zone X. |
X | Pure white of the printing paper base; specular glare or light sources in the picture area. |