Sparrow said:
Roger you are arguing against a case I am not making . . .
Dear Stewart,
And you are arguing against a case I am not making.
I do not maintain that you can measure the light intensity by eye, nor would I dream of saying so.
I do maintain that you can very often judge exposure surprisingly accurately by eye, based on numerous memories of lighting and subjects.
If this sounds like hair-splitting to you, go back to the original few posts.
The OP said, "I don't need a meter"
Several people agreed.
Bill came in with a post saying, in effect, that you can't judge exposure, based on a highly personalized definition of 'judge'.
The principal point I have attempted to make is that surprisingly often, you CAN judge the correct exposure, using any normal definition of the word 'judge'.
A secondary point is that if you are going to use a meter -- which is an excellent idea, whenever you have time or unless you don't feel like it -- you might as well learn to use it properly, and to understand how film speeds are determined.
This means metering shadows for neg, highlights for tranny, and if you want to get clever about it, subject brightness range (I don't remember 'obscure colour theory').
Metering mid-tones (your suggestion, not mine) means relying on experience, fudging and latitude, which my suggestions do not. If you are happy guessing at mid-tones, fine. I'm not. I'm happier guessing at exposures. But we're both using experience, NOT science, at this stage of the game. The fact that you then meter what you guess to be a mid-tone does not negate your earlier guesswork.
Which bit of the above do you disagree with?
Cheers,
R.