Bill Pierce
Well-known
Digital images are a bit like color slide film. Overexpose them and the highlights are reduced to detailless digital cellophane. Consequently, some TTL meters on digital cameras are set to slightly underexpose many scenes and guarantee that highlight detail is preserved. This is a good thing, sort of. It preserves highlight detail but reduces shadow detail and the overall brightness range captured in the file. Of course, if you are a landscape or still life photographer, you can check the histogram or, even simpler, make a series of bracketed exposures. But for street photography, news or just plain family snaps that’s not a realistic option.
As of late, I’ve been going back to a technique that news photographers used when quickly editable color slide film was the choice for journalism. Bracketing exposure simply wasn’t possible in many situations where a single moment told the story. The answer was to use a handheld incident meter because it favored correct exposure for the highlights and, at least where the meter was held, didn’t blow out those highlights.
Guess what, it works for digital color, too. The ISO you set your meter at may not be the same as the one you set your digital camera to, but, with experimentation, you can come up with a setting that gives you the fullest exposure (the most shadow detail, the least noise) that still preserves highlight detail, all-in-all, an exposure that gives you the greatest tonal range. (And, since that is a consistent, unchanging exposure, unlike automatic exposure, processing a burst of shots to a consistent appearance is often easier.)
So, stupid as it sounds, I am often using an old fashioned, hand held, incident meter with my modern, auto exposure capable digital camera. Any thoughts outside of the one that I may be an idiot?
As of late, I’ve been going back to a technique that news photographers used when quickly editable color slide film was the choice for journalism. Bracketing exposure simply wasn’t possible in many situations where a single moment told the story. The answer was to use a handheld incident meter because it favored correct exposure for the highlights and, at least where the meter was held, didn’t blow out those highlights.
Guess what, it works for digital color, too. The ISO you set your meter at may not be the same as the one you set your digital camera to, but, with experimentation, you can come up with a setting that gives you the fullest exposure (the most shadow detail, the least noise) that still preserves highlight detail, all-in-all, an exposure that gives you the greatest tonal range. (And, since that is a consistent, unchanging exposure, unlike automatic exposure, processing a burst of shots to a consistent appearance is often easier.)
So, stupid as it sounds, I am often using an old fashioned, hand held, incident meter with my modern, auto exposure capable digital camera. Any thoughts outside of the one that I may be an idiot?