gb hill said:
..... The way I understand it is that with an incident light meter you take the reading toward the light source & with a reflective meter the reading is taking of the light falling off the subject. With the incident LM a white diffuser is placed over the cell & with a reflective LM the cell is uncovered. My question is this. What is the determining factor for when to use a reflective reading and when to use a incident reading when taking a photograph? If I'm incorrect about anything please correct me.
Hi GB,
Kindly let me correct first the definitions, for the sake of doing the right thing when metering, and afterwards I will give my opinion about each way.
With the incident metering you don't point the white dome towards the light surce. On the contrary, if there is a strong light source like a brigh sky, sun, spot light, etc you may shadow the white dome with your other hand at abut some 20 cm.
With the incident metering you point the white dome at the place of the subject and towards the camera.
As for the reflective metering, here you are reading the light
reflected by the subject towards your camera, this is the basic way in which all cameras meter light. The problem here is that a white dressed woman will reflect much more light than a black clothed priest.
Hence, two basic conclusions.
The reflective metering asks for compensation (the white dress of the lady will byass the reading, making her face rather black). I, e, with the reflective metering the photographer needs to think what is the metering reading and what he has to do in order to compensate what the meter is reading..
The incident reading, on the other hand, is more like an averaging way to get away quickly.
In very general lines, which always have their exceptions, a beginer will be better of with the incident white dome, safer way.
But once you get an advanced stage, most of the times you may be using and compensating reflective readings.
Because the averaging white dome reading is a compromise in which the shadowed parts of the image will suffer to some degree.
Cheers,
Ruben