Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/09/19
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I have noticed that many electronic forums on photographic subjects periodically become obsessed about meters. This week its the leica meter, next week its the EOS-3 meter and so on. I think a big point that people are missing is that calibrating a meter really isn't all that exact a science, and even if every M camera or EOS or Nikon came off the factory floor calibrated in exactly the same way, it still wouldn't mean that when you got it home, it would give you the exposures you want. Why? Because exposure is a matter of the meter, the shutter, your technique, the film and your subjective goals for the overall look of the slide and negative. No single calibration can take all those things into account. Nothing is easy in life. So, to all the meter whiners, I say: 1. If you want to know how your meter (*and* shutters) works, you have to test it, with the film you use, and the development you do (in your pro lab, or in your house). Even rich pros like John Shaw have to test their meters. Shaw has written that he has Nikon cameras that up to 3 stops apart. 2. If you want to be sure the expsoure is on, and the light is tricky, bracket. Film is cheap. Even Ansel himself shot two frames of important pictures if he could, to "bracket" development. Pete