Moriturii
Well-known
1)So I've been thinking, how well does an incident light meter work or even an hand held reflective meter when a consumer lens is measured in F stops instead of T stops? How do we know that a Summicron 50mm f2 at f2 really is f2 and not more like f2.8 due to it having glass elements that such up a portion of the light and how different does this effect old uncoated lenses and the most modern lenses that are multi coated? How does this effect measuring and metering light in a scene regards to a hand held incident and reflective meter?
I was checking the metering on my Hexar RF and it was 1-2 stops under or overexposing depending on where I was pointing it and measuring light with the internal light meter (a even lit wall, wooden floors, a lit lamp etc) and then testing my Gossen Digisix and saw what it said. After being puzzled for a few days I took out the lens, put in front of my gossen digisix and measured again and lo' finally I was getting same readings as I did with Hexar RF's internal meter.
2)And also, modern lenses are so very contrasty, is that why people say "overexpose and under-develop in sunny scenes"? And will this rule be thrown away if one uses an uncoated lens such as, I don't know, Elmar 5cm f3.5 etc that doesn't give such extreme contrast in pictures with deeeeep shadows?
Just some random thoughts in my heads, anyone willing to shed some lights on these random points? Not sure how to formulated these ideas into a post that makes sense.
Discuss!
I was checking the metering on my Hexar RF and it was 1-2 stops under or overexposing depending on where I was pointing it and measuring light with the internal light meter (a even lit wall, wooden floors, a lit lamp etc) and then testing my Gossen Digisix and saw what it said. After being puzzled for a few days I took out the lens, put in front of my gossen digisix and measured again and lo' finally I was getting same readings as I did with Hexar RF's internal meter.
2)And also, modern lenses are so very contrasty, is that why people say "overexpose and under-develop in sunny scenes"? And will this rule be thrown away if one uses an uncoated lens such as, I don't know, Elmar 5cm f3.5 etc that doesn't give such extreme contrast in pictures with deeeeep shadows?
Just some random thoughts in my heads, anyone willing to shed some lights on these random points? Not sure how to formulated these ideas into a post that makes sense.
Discuss!