dave lackey
Veteran
Sunny 16? Some kind of meter?
I once attended a lecture with Marc Riboud speaking. During the Q&A at the end someone asked how he determined exposure.
His reply, "I look".
What else can you say, he was right.
I was under the impression that HCB was notoriously bad with his exposures - to the point where his printers had to burn and dodge a great amount to get a usable image.
In a thread on photo.net, François P. Weill wrote:I was under the impression that HCB was notoriously bad with his exposures - to the point where his printers had to burn and dodge a great amount to get a usable image.
In a thread on photo.net, François P. Weill wrote:
"Unfortunately this approach is notorious to have lead the Master into completely botch all the rolls he took in May 1968, in Paris during one of the largest demonstration he covered, by extreme overexposure...
Due to the (justified) fame of "Monsieur" Cartier-Bresson the lab promptly realized inter-negatives to allow printing of the otherwise inexploitable shots... Any less famous Free-Lance photographer bringing back such films to the Press Agency would have been kicked in the a..s and fired on the spot ! ... "
http://photo.net/leica-rangefinders-forum/00REf9?start=30
Not being HCB, I don't use a meter either.
Mostly I use my M3, my M6 hasn't had a battery in it for years.
Do I malexpose some shots - yes.
But when I briefly used the M6 meter I missed a lot more shots by trying to get the metering right with the built-in rather than relying on my brain. And missing the right moment because of it.