Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/11/17
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I have and use a nice old SA. It won't meter on my M6 and i don't care. The angle of metering is too great. I usually us it on my M2 or M4 with an MR meter. The combination works great. Cheers! kw >You are correct. Most of the time I've found that with scenics, simply >tilting the lens down to exclude most of the sky is sufficient, certainly >with negative film. If you can find enough of a single tonality (any >tone) to fill the central 3/4 of the *camera's* viewfinder you can meter >it and compensate the exposure to place it in it's proper tonality >relative to middle. If this isn't possible, you can also get in close to >anything of even tone (without refocussing the lens) in the same light as >the subject, meter, and recompose. Last, you always have the option of >metering with a longer lens, such as a 90 or 135, and then mount the >wide-angle. None of these methods is lightning-quick, but if the light >isn't changing quickly, once the exposure is set you can usually keep >shooting. As you noted, a handheld spotmeter is also an option. I >carry the Sekonic L408. It also offers incident and flash metering as >well as a 5-deg. spotmeter, which I find 99% sufficient. It is more >compact than the new 508, which has a 1-5deg. zoom spotmeter, but the >incident housing is up top on a swivel like a studio meter. > >Regards, >Nigel > >On Tue, 17 Nov 1998 18:29:08 -0000 "Dr James Harper" ><DRJH@btinternet.com> writes: > >>I have a query. Several replies mentioned a metering problem, which I >>understood, perhaps wrongly, to be the possibility of incorrect >>exposure >>because the meter's measuring angle covers a too large (or was it too >>small?) area of the scene. If that is so, the solution is presumably >>to be >>even more careful about exactly what you select to meter on. But is >>that >>possible with a very wide angle lens? If the meter is being >>presented >>with a whole landscape, it must be difficult for it to decide what the >>important parts are. Only a spot meter would cope, I imagine. In >>what >>conditions is the problem, if it exists, most likely to occur? >> >>Apologies for any unintentional technical naivete. All comments >>gratefully received. >> >>JH >> > >___________________________________________________________________ >You don't need to buy Internet access to use free Internet e-mail. >Get completely free e-mail from Juno at http://www.juno.com/getjuno.html >or call Juno at (800) 654-JUNO [654-5866] - ---- Ken Wilcox Carolyn's Personal Touch Portraits LHSA, MEA, LAW preferred---> <wilcox@mail.tir.com> <kwilcox@gfn.org>