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p.2 #9 · who still uses a light meter? | |
You are basically saying that the camera's meter IS unreliable. You are using your experience and knowledge about light metering to compensate for the camera meter's shortcoming. This method requires some skill, time and patience, and it's still not as accurate/reliable as a reading from an incident light meter. I do that too i.e. I don't use an incident light meter outdoors. I use a handheld meter only in the studio with strobe lighting.
ShutterLover wrote:
Yes and no. By feel and memory I can guestimate roughly what I need my lights to be dialled at. However, I generally need a handful of test shots to get it it bang on. Using the meter calibrated to my Canons I'm generally 90% there by the first test shot, perhaps only needing a single nudge to be spot on.
That said, shooting tethered sometimes I've set the aperture I need and then just think in terms of a bit more or less light rather than ratios and f-numbers.
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