How to shoot a Canon P without meter

littlemax

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(This concerns all RF meterless cameras as well :) ) : How do you shoot an RF camera without any form of meter ? Is it possible ? Do some of you do it? any tips ?...

I have experienced playing with an hybrid camera for a few months but not sure I could do that at all..
(and I have a meter for the Canon P but not accurate :D ...and dont want to scratch the top plate of my P either ... )
 
You need the Kodak Exposure Guide. It's great. E even after a single roll, you'll start to remember what you use in sunlight, shadow, inside in low light.

It's been a real boon, personally. Even when I use a metered camera I find it handy, if helps me notice when the meter is giving the wrong reading, if say a dial has been knocked out of position, and I still use those settings when, say, photographing fireworks, which you can't of course easily meter.

www.kodak.com/cluster/global/en/consumer/.../ac61.pdf


Edit: having problems finding the site. PM or email me if you'd like me to email a copy.
 
You need the Kodak Exposure Guide. It's great. E even after a single roll, you'll start to remember what you use in sunlight, shadow, inside in low light.

It's been a real boon, personally. Even when I use a metered camera I find it handy, if helps me notice when the meter is giving the wrong reading, if say a dial has been knocked out of position, and I still use those settings when, say, photographing fireworks, which you can't of course easily meter.

www.kodak.com/cluster/global/en/consumer/.../ac61.pdf


Edit: having problems finding the site. PM or email me if you'd like me to email a copy.

Is this the document you were trying to link? I'd be interested in getting a copy of the exposure guide you reference, if this is not the one you meant.

I collect exposure guides and I'm collating several into one together with reference EV situations that are particularly common in my photography.


Shooting the P without a meter should not be a big problem after you memorize a few common situation, but much depends on you type of photography. Outdoor, under broad light, it's quite easy to manage this way, but in very mixed light (windows + table lamps + plus ceiling spots, etc) it could be tricky, even though in general I know that in the evening I can get decent exposures at around 1/15 - 1/30 f2.8 and 400 film.
 
I have quickly read the sunny 16 rule. And I will dedicate a full hour to the Fred Parker guide to exposure. Think it will do :)
I will do some cheat sheets to carry on with me and will read/learn it when commuting
 
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