Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/04/05
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Joseph Codispoti wrote: > However, there is indeed merit for the latest advances in meter technology. > Especially for the photographer working in rapidly changing situations and > lighting conditions. The artist photographing a still life, has ample time > to meter, interpret and consider all aspects of exposure. The "action" > photographer, on the other hand, does not have that luxury. I don't care how good the meter is, the photographer is still the deciding factor in what the exposure is, and to obtain good consistent results you must be able to know what the light is doing and how to be sure your meter is not lying to you. It doesn't matter if you shooting something sitting still as in your example of a still life or something moving like a NFL football game, if you blow the exposure you blow the exposure and the results are the same. In my work I shoot 95% color transparency film and I have learned that I get correct exposures if I shoot what my Minolta meter tells me to shoot. I cover everything from non-moving subjects to NFL football and NASCAR racing and shoot most of it on color slide film, and have used the Nikon F4, EOS 1, and now the Leica R8--- no matter which body I am using I have seen situations daily that the internal TTL meter was just dead wrong. I am not an "art" photographer, I have always considered myself a reporter with a camera, it is my job to get images that tell the story of whatever I am covering on film. I now I shoot exclusively for magazines and corporations who require chrome, and I used to shoot for newspapers and wire services in the days when chrome was still the preferred color film. Chrome has almost no margin for error. You either get the correct exposure or you don't. Negative film has a huge latitude and a lot of room for error, comparatively speaking. If you take the time to learn how to us an incident meter and how to meter for various lighting circumstances you will learn how to get not only well exposed images, but grow an understanding of light, how it works on film and how to control it and use it to your full advantage to create images that express what you are wanting to express. Too bad Fred Ward is no longer on the list as his dissertation on incident metering is the best worded description of why and how to use them I have yet seen. Harrison McClary http://people.delphi.com/hmphoto