[OT] Looking for Exposure tables

jcm0

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Hi,


I remember to have seen by the past printed tables allowing to approximate the exposure regarding lighting factors such as : country, season, hour, weather, etc etc These tables were pretty old (from 1920-1940) if I recall, and some factors may have change, but they are still usefull.


Does somebody have such a table ? I would be forever greatfull if I could get a scan 🙂

Thanks a lot !

Regards,

JCM
 
Great 🙂

Great 🙂

Thank you Thank you Thank you !!!!!!!

This is what I wanted 🙂


NB: I am still interested if someone has a version of these vintage tables, since they give a lot of details on lighting conditions.
 
Hi,


Thank you for your help Rover. Your link is about a conversion tool. I was rather looking at a way to estimate exposure without a lightmeter.

Thank you Paul for this very interesting table. In fact it is very close from the one of Fred Parker (see above), but gives some interesting details. This is what I would like to get but with more sample of lighting cases ex: TV shot, indoor portrait with clouds outside, under one tree : substract 2 diaph, etc etc.

Thanks to you again !

🙂
 
jcm0 said:
Hi,
Thank you for your help Rover. Your link is about a conversion tool. I was rather looking at a way to estimate exposure without a lightmeter.
Thanks to you again !
🙂
jcm0,
Yes; it converts what you see into useful f/stop and speed combinations.
The tool that Rover linked you to is what you have been describing. It has a pretty long list of lighting conditions and then a dial thing that takes those conditins and gives f/stop and shutter speed choices.
It also has zone sytem readings. And f/stop and speeds that work well for pinhole photography.
I have one that I've used for quite a while now. Probably the best $18 I've spent on photo gear.
Worth looking at again, I think.
Rob
 
Rbiemer, Rover: You are damned right !!! I have seen the list of lighting conditions : very interested.

Thank you very much for your help 🙂 !!!

Regards,

JCM
 
I found something like what you're after a while ago, but it was falling apart and faded, so I made myself some new versions. They're split between an LV table and an EV table. I use the LV table to judge the amount of light, which gives me the EV at ISO 100, and then I use the EV table to convert that to shutter speed / aperture settings. Really useful when trying to meter a scene without a meter!

http://www.matteaton.com/LVTable.pdf
http://www.matteaton.com/EVTable.pdf

Thats links to both of them hosted on my webspace. They're PDFs so you can resize and print freely.

Hope thats useful!
 
I have one too that I made based on Fred Parker's chart and some ones I devised out of film box charts a few years back. I tape it to the back of my cameras.I attached it here in pdf.

Nothing revolutionary. That slide-rule is awesome! Totally 1950s.

cheers
doug
 

Attachments

Yeah, thats a really useful table!

Too bad mine are too big to tape to my cameras, unless I were to buy a 10x8, in which case i'd probably just use a light meter anyway!

Good job!
 
Great table, Doug. I made a similar one a while ago.

Here's a tip: if there are situations that you normally find yourself shooting in that are not listed in any of the tables available, meter it once with a metered camera or handheld meter, then record it for subsequent times.
 
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