68lbs
Suspended / Banned
- Messages
- 5,450
- Name
- April 2008
- Edit My Images
- No
I've been doing 'this photography thing' for a couple of months now and even in this short amount of time I feel I've come a long way. What was once a boring overcast landscape with a badly blown sky, is now a dynamic wide angle with interesting clouds. Ok, so I might be over exagerating a little, but the point is that I can now get a reasonably well exposed shot out of the camera. But something occurred to me last night...
I DON'T THINK I KNOW HOW TO METER PROPERLY!
This is how I work... I shoot fully manual and start off deciding what kind of DoF I want. Once I've selected the aperture, I then find a shutter speed that gets me 'in the zone' on the light meter for a given point on the image that I want exposed best (I use 'partial metering' on the 400D) - I find I sort of instinctively know whether it needs to be +/- a bit depending on the scene as a whole. I always shoot ISO 100 if possible, and only change this if I can't get a suitable shutter speed. I then shoot. And it's now I do 'my version' of metering. I look at the histogram and use this to decide if I need to shoot slightly faster/slower. If I'm playing around with still life stuff, I might try a variety of apertures, and after my first 'batch' of shots at say f/6.0 I might try f/2.8 and I just whack the shutterspeed up a bit to compensate and shoot with no regard whatsoever for what the light meter might be telling me. Then I look at the histogram again, and adjust accordingly.
Now this seems to work ok when I'm 'playing around at home' or outside doing landscapes etc. However, it would be completely impractical where time is an issue and the shot might be gone in an instance.
My point of all this is...
Is the way I do things completely wrong, or with experience would I instinctively get better and better at getting it right first time? And if my technique is completely wrong, what 'should' I be doing? I've read things on here about metering off bits of grey card etc, but am left wondering if you have time to point the camera at bits of card, why don't you just fire off a shot and adjust depending on what the histogram says?
Thanks for listening.
I DON'T THINK I KNOW HOW TO METER PROPERLY!
This is how I work... I shoot fully manual and start off deciding what kind of DoF I want. Once I've selected the aperture, I then find a shutter speed that gets me 'in the zone' on the light meter for a given point on the image that I want exposed best (I use 'partial metering' on the 400D) - I find I sort of instinctively know whether it needs to be +/- a bit depending on the scene as a whole. I always shoot ISO 100 if possible, and only change this if I can't get a suitable shutter speed. I then shoot. And it's now I do 'my version' of metering. I look at the histogram and use this to decide if I need to shoot slightly faster/slower. If I'm playing around with still life stuff, I might try a variety of apertures, and after my first 'batch' of shots at say f/6.0 I might try f/2.8 and I just whack the shutterspeed up a bit to compensate and shoot with no regard whatsoever for what the light meter might be telling me. Then I look at the histogram again, and adjust accordingly.
Now this seems to work ok when I'm 'playing around at home' or outside doing landscapes etc. However, it would be completely impractical where time is an issue and the shot might be gone in an instance.
My point of all this is...
Is the way I do things completely wrong, or with experience would I instinctively get better and better at getting it right first time? And if my technique is completely wrong, what 'should' I be doing? I've read things on here about metering off bits of grey card etc, but am left wondering if you have time to point the camera at bits of card, why don't you just fire off a shot and adjust depending on what the histogram says?
Thanks for listening.

At thread title, i was in two minds to look or not 