Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/04/08
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]you said:From: Five Senses Productions <fls@5senses.com> Date: Wed, 08 Apr 1998 16:54:59 -0700 Subject: Re: [Leica] 18% metering often wrong Your quote explains the problem we all face, but does nothing to explain how to resolve the problem. By saying that "the correct exposure is the one that makes the photo look the way you want" says nothing about how to achieve that goal. If you sent an amateur out with that advice, he would have no clue where to begin...... my response: Photography is art mixed with science, but mostly art. Cameras, film, light, etc are but tools. An "amateur" (d0 you really mean beginner? I know some pretty good amateurs, and the word is from the French meaning someone who lives something) is, certainly, going to mess up. There is no way to tell them how to take pictures so they do not. Messing up is critical. A person who does not mess up is not learning. I tell everyone I teach photography to to begin by just taking pictures using the exposure guide in the film box, mess up, studying the result and trying not to mess up the same way next time. Eventually they learn control. It is a life-long process -- your idea of perfectly exposed is not my idea. 18 percent gray cards and meters calibrated thereto are designed only to give you a starting place, a known standard from which to go. And if you still don't like it, scan it into a computer and fix it. Add clouds, goose the contrast, move trees around, whatever. If you can afford a Leica you can afford Photoshop. But quit thinking that there's some magical way to meter to get a "perfect" negative. Reality is the real world but perfect starts out in your mind, not in a camera. The camera is just a tool to let you produce an image that, you hope, will reflect some of what that reality meant to you. And remember: Even Ansel Adams blew it occasionally, despite all his controls. He had the true secret to photography--don't show anyone the bad shots. charlie Trentelman Ogden, Utah (state motto: Getting The 2002 Olympics proves we're not all that strange, right?)