SolaresLarrave
My M5s need red dots!
Now... How do you, pros and old-hands, do it?
My recently deceased MR4 meter used to be on top of my M3. Not all the time, but then, I knew that the angle of coverage was approximately 30 degrees. Most of the time, I got exposures as good as I get with a camera with a TTL meter.
Now... any tricks or procedures to know? What do you use more often, incident or reflected light? I know you meter reflected light off the subject, but how do you handle incident light?
To work on a scenario like this: you're leaving home at about 10:30 AM. The light is typically winterish, a bit flat. A quick reading on my lawn says it's a 1/500 at f4 (pretty intense but not by much; BTW, I use ISO 400 slide film). However, I take another reading off the opposite side and it says between f5.6 and f8. I settle to use f5.6, just to be on the safe side. I know that if I face a lighter area, I should close the lens either half a stop (to lelt's call it f6.5) or even more (f8 or f9) if the contrast is very marked. If I go into a shady spot, I use the same logic to open the lens from f5.6 to f4 or even a bit more. I've measured at this point enough to figure out a one or two stop difference in lighting.
Is this reasonable? Or should I meter incident light? If I did, do I aim the meter at my lawn, my home, the area that looks at the street? My body? The palm of my hand?
Thanks in advance! 🙂
My recently deceased MR4 meter used to be on top of my M3. Not all the time, but then, I knew that the angle of coverage was approximately 30 degrees. Most of the time, I got exposures as good as I get with a camera with a TTL meter.
Now... any tricks or procedures to know? What do you use more often, incident or reflected light? I know you meter reflected light off the subject, but how do you handle incident light?
To work on a scenario like this: you're leaving home at about 10:30 AM. The light is typically winterish, a bit flat. A quick reading on my lawn says it's a 1/500 at f4 (pretty intense but not by much; BTW, I use ISO 400 slide film). However, I take another reading off the opposite side and it says between f5.6 and f8. I settle to use f5.6, just to be on the safe side. I know that if I face a lighter area, I should close the lens either half a stop (to lelt's call it f6.5) or even more (f8 or f9) if the contrast is very marked. If I go into a shady spot, I use the same logic to open the lens from f5.6 to f4 or even a bit more. I've measured at this point enough to figure out a one or two stop difference in lighting.
Is this reasonable? Or should I meter incident light? If I did, do I aim the meter at my lawn, my home, the area that looks at the street? My body? The palm of my hand?
Thanks in advance! 🙂