Hi Richard,
slightly OT, but I just wondered how this, and this
http://www.talkphotography.co.uk/forums/showpost.php?p=4390075&postcount=4 (while great advice) fit with the documentary stele you push so strongly?
Cheers
Hugh
Hugh You are an experienced photographer, so this isn't aimed at you... However to answer your question I will provide a global answer
Understanding light - the amount of it, the range of it and the quality of it is a prerequisite for any good photographer regardless of style or what you are shooting. A meter is only one tool in the armoury of tools (including your brain, a histogram, the camera meter) that helps you understand it
I am not advocating using a light meter for every shot, but on occasions, knowing that "that corner of the room" is F4 and "that corner" is F8 is very useful.
Pre-setting up lighting has nothing to do with documentary shooting (or any other style), it just means you are prepared for what's going to happen next.
Pre-metering a scene has nothing to do with documentary shooting (or any other style), it just means you are prepared for what's going to happen next.
Often I will meter off an assistant in a location, knowing the B&G will be there in a minute, and make a mental note of the setting. My style has a lot to do with anticipation.
Forgetting all of the noise about my style....
Good photography is about
- light
- composition
- timing
The end result is a print or image on the screen
It has both a..
- technical / scientific element
- artistic creative element
I feel in these debates we always miss out one element or the other. I can be as artistic, candid and unobtrusive as you like. If I screw up the exposure, I have screwed up the shot, the artistic element of the shot is destroyed anyway.
It is the photographers skill that allows one to seamlessly technically nail a shot AND get the artistic element of the shot in the bag too. No mater how much we protest, argue or debate this, we need to sort both elements out.
How we do it is up for debate, there are no right answers. If someone said to me I use the sunny 16 rule, it works for me every time - then that's cool, they have found a short-cut that works.
Me - I use a combination of metering in camera, metering out of the camera, and an the application of common sense and foresight. I use things like the sunny 16 rule to keep me in check.
What I do advocate is spending some time THINKING about exposure. That's a general photography observation, not just aimed at weddings..
I say this, and I will keep saying it:
With P, A, S modes + auto ISO + TTL flash there are way too many decisions being made for you by your camera. While these decisions sort of make sure all shots are basically OK, they strip your chance to be really creative and in control. Throw in the mix that the camera makes the decisions for you on the basis of the metering pattern you (or the camera) chose and you can start to see why people struggle.
Using a hand held meter
can put you back to a position of shooting from first principles, helping you deal with the following questions...
- What is the illumination of the scene?
- How do
I want my shot to look?
- How much flash do I want to use?
- What ISO do I want?
- What Aperture do I want?
- What Shutter speed do I want?
Of course that also means if you are making a compromise you are in charge of it (not the camera)
---
On reflection I also want to add
At a typical wedding I shoot (non complete list)
- landscapes
- fireworks
- portraits
- indoors
- outdoors
- with on camera flash
- with off camera flash
- with "pre installed" flash heads
- using a reflector
- using a torch
- still lifes
- food
- totally candid work
- up close and personal candids
- a few posed group shots
- into the light
- with the light behind me
- in the morning
- in full sun
- at night (moonlight)
- on a tripod
- On a monopod
- In mixed lighting
- in a moving car
The point I am making is that modern wedding are particularly fluid and changing, and the range of work you need to pull out of the bag in a day can vary greatly, and is often quite challenging. I will settle for any tool at my disposal to make my life easier or do a better job. Shooting fireworks outside in the rain 30 seconds after being in a dark marquee doing the bouquet toss is totally normal for me. You cant work like that without pre-metering or being prepared