Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/05/01
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]At 12:03 +0545 01-05-1997, 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. >Ian Stanley > >Kathmandu, Nepal I am also a new Leica M user since one month. I have been using Nikon equipment for about 15 years (manual FM and a set of Nikkors, and more recently also a 35 Ti). My Leica M6 and Summilux-M 35 mm f/1.4 ASPH make a nice couple, but the transition from Nikon to Leica M was (and still is) difficult. The rangefinder concept is somewhat discomforting for long-standing SLR users (even if the manual FM can be considered as the SLR equivalent of the rangefinder M6). The most difficult problem, however, was to get used to the metering system. First of all, the spot metering of the M6 is not quite accurate in the sense that you do not actually "see" the metering spot in the viewfinder (this is impossible due to the rangefinder concept where the viewfinder stays the same for different lenses). So you have to guess and hope it is more or less correct. I have already had numerous occasions where shots were overexposured because I had a tendency to meter on a less bright part of the object (habit from the FM). This took some getting used to but, frankly speaking, I am still preferring the 60-40 approach from Nikon. In that case 60 % is determined by the round area in the middle of the viewfinder, and 40 % is evenly spread among the other parts of the image. This gives correct exposures in most situations. With much contrasted objects, you just point the camera somewhat to the less brighter parts, measure, and go back to your original position. In my experience this will result in a much higher number of successfully exposed pictures and slides. You could resume by saying that to expose correctly with the M6 you need a more careful approach - small mistakes will much quicker result in bad results than with the FM (and then I am not even referring to the latest Nikon F5 matrix-metering, which is giving incredible results). Pascal Belgium - ------------------------------------------ This message was created and sent on a Macintosh PowerBook - ------------------------------------------