CMur12
Veteran
I use a spotmeter for slides.
My spotmeter has a "highlight" and a "shadow" button. I normally meter a highlight and hit the highlight button. I usually take some other readings for comparison, as well. I do this mainly with medium format cameras that don't have a good built-in meter.
I use an incident meter for portraiture, sometimes even resorting to a flat disc diffuser.
I think it depends on what you're used to, because any kind of metering will work if you use it correctly. I've been shooting slides since 1972, and I learned to expose accurately with the then-state-of-the-art TTL averaging metering in my first SLR. When I used compact RFs for travel, I used the same metering techniques I had used with the SLRs, resulting in perfectly exposed slides. When I shoot 35mm today, I still use the averaging meters built into my older cameras.
- Murray
My spotmeter has a "highlight" and a "shadow" button. I normally meter a highlight and hit the highlight button. I usually take some other readings for comparison, as well. I do this mainly with medium format cameras that don't have a good built-in meter.
I use an incident meter for portraiture, sometimes even resorting to a flat disc diffuser.
I think it depends on what you're used to, because any kind of metering will work if you use it correctly. I've been shooting slides since 1972, and I learned to expose accurately with the then-state-of-the-art TTL averaging metering in my first SLR. When I used compact RFs for travel, I used the same metering techniques I had used with the SLRs, resulting in perfectly exposed slides. When I shoot 35mm today, I still use the averaging meters built into my older cameras.
- Murray