Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/05/01
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]On Wed, Apr 30, 1997 11:18 PM, Ian Stanley wrote: >To keep this in line with Leica - I was using my new M6! For a >change I was also shooting Velvia as the shots are for a brochure for the >Dhulikhel Municipality. It has taken some time but I am starting to trust >the meter in the M6 and did not resort to my best guess or Pentax spot meter >quite as often. I am finding that usually the three readings agree as long >as I point the M6 meter at the right thing. I have been pleased with the >results I have been getting so far other than some problems with the >processing and mounting. I would very much like to know how you use meters of this sort (centerweighted) for precise exposure. I too have a Pentax meter, and I am very fond of it, because using it, I can accurately determine the contrast range of the scene, and manipulate my exposure accordingly, with a minimum of bracketing (a nice word for "guessing") So far, the best I've been able to do with a centerweighted or averaging-type meter is to know it's sensitivity pattern fairly well, and try to meter off a scene of average brightness (a slice of sky, grass, etc), calculating in my head that a late-afternoon sky might be +4 stops in brightness above sunlit grass, and open shade, maybe -1 stop below that. And of course, the relationships change when filtration is used! Yes, the thought has occurred to me that I may not be using the Leica in the most appropriate manner, and that, if I'm going to be putting the thing on a tripod, and fussing with Zone System calculations, that maybe the compactness and ease of handling are going to waste. Thoughts on the appropriateness of using a small camera like a big one are welcomed. Jeff