Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/04/08

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Subject: Re: [Leica] Metering shade
From: Five Senses Productions <fls@5senses.com>
Date: Wed, 08 Apr 1998 11:08:46 -0700

Thanks for the tips....I'll have to buy an incident meter and try these
techniques
out for once.  Any recommendations on a good quality incident meter, anyone?

At 09:58 PM 4/7/98 -0400, Carl Socolow wrote:
>Five Senses Productions wrote:
>> 
>> When you say "meter the highlights" and "meter the shadows"
>> do you mean you hold the meter in the same light that the
>> highlights and shadows, respectively, are receiving?
>> 
>
><SNIP>
>-- 
>Francesco,
>
>That is correct. Either by holding the meter in the scene to be
>photographed so that the highlight and shadow areas of the scene are
>measured. Or by holding it in comparable light at camera position so
>that it replicates that which is of importance in the scene.
>
>For example, last summer I was doing an architectural exterior of an
>historic building that had some trees on the site. There was no time of
>day when the light was on the front of the building that there was not
>tree shadows on half of it. I metered in the shadow area and in the
>highlight (or sunlit) area. Then averaged the two. I should add that one
>of the qualities I've found with the E100S and E100SW is an incredible
>tolerance towards overexposure in the brighter and/or highlight areas.
>I've been able to bias my readings for more shadow detail without fear
>of losing those brighter areas that historically I've always considered
>more important when exposing transparency film. Certainly, I still like
>a saturated chrome, but it's also nice to be able to work within a
>five-stop range instead of a three stop range. Hope this helps.
>
>Carl S.
>Sometimes the wrong thing is exactly the thing you should do.
> 


Francesco Sanfilippo,
Five Senses Productions
webmaster@5senses.com


http://www.5senses.com/