Do I need one and how do I use the information they provide?
You already have one - built into your camera. You probably don't need a separate meter unless you're doing studio work with flash.
There is nothing that you can do with a hand meter that you cannot do with the one in the camera - except manual flash metering. They are very handy for that; it's the only time I ever use one.There is nothing that you can do with a hand meter that you cannot do with the one in the camera - except manual flash metering. They are very handy for that; it's the only time I ever use one.
More convenient and more consistent.Some might argue that a hand meter is more convenient in some situations but that is something of a moot point.
You can take incident readings with camera's meter very easily
and a hand meter is unlikely to have a spot option, and it certainly won't have anything as sophisticated as evaluative/matrix metering.
Neither will it allow you to explore more advanced technqiues like Expose To The Right (of the histogram) because it cannot create a histogram in the first place.
The meter doesn't need the histogram. It provides an accurate reading. If you want to overexpose, just add some exposure. However expose to the right is not about overexposing.
There are other drawbacks, which can be significant. A hand meter attempts to measure the light entering the lens, which is not the same as the light recorded by the sensor.
A hand meter measures the light falling on the subject. A cameras meter records the light reflected from it - very different and only one is accurate - so that it needs no adjustment.
There are losses and inaccuracies all the way down the line. Vignetting is one, absorbsion by the glass is another, variances in actual f/number, variances in actual shutter speed, and variances in actual ISO.
You should calibrate your mater when you get it to take account of any differences you may find. That is standard practice - in reality the difference is not much - certainly nowhere near the innaccuracies in using the camera's reflected meter.
For truly accurate exposure, check the LCD and histogram. That is a representation of the actual exposure, rather than a calculated guess at what it might be - which is all any meter can do.
I don't relly get that. It's very difficult to read a histogram accurately as the histogram will look different for every image and each different scene. A reading of the light falling on your subject is the only way to be accurate unless you want to spend time playing around with a histogram for every shot.... I just don't see the benefit in that lost time and effort when one press of a button does it for you.
You could say that professional photographers like to be seen using a hand meter because it impresses clients. But I wouldn't dare to suggest such a thing![]()
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Hoppy, having recently converted to M and a meter, I see the benefit and the person that thinks otherwise is a little foolish.
I suppose it's down to how and what you shoot but on a wedding, use of the histogram will not give you consistent exposures shot to shot. An incident meter will.
I respect your views mate but I think you have this seriously wrong.
There are times where your camera meter can easily be fooled though and that's where the incident meter can come in very handy![]()
I disagree with that Hoppy. THere's not many situations a reflected reading will be the same as an ambient reading.
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Hoppy, having recently converted to M and a meter, I see the benefit and the person that thinks otherwise is a little foolish.
I suppose it's down to how and what you shoot but on a wedding, use of the histogram will not give you consistent exposures shot to shot. An incident meter will.
I respect your views mate but I think you have this seriously wrong.
Hoppy, I know you're a stickler for accuracy, which is why I'd like to direct you here in case it was previously unknown to you:
http://www.bythom.com/graycards.htm
Keep up the detailed posts, they're very worthwhile!
I'm not sure you are properly getting how exposure meters work, and as a result not understanding what I said.
Almost essential for flash particularly with multi flash setups - And certainly a requirement to get bang on consistent results even with ambient light.I didn't say there was no benefit to using a hand meter. Sometimes it is more convenient, and very useful for flash. I said that.
Not sure I agree but I'm reading one and answering as I go.I also said that (apart from flash) there is nothing you can do with a hand meter that you cannot to with the built-in meter, and that there are quite a few very important things that you cannot do with one.
I agree with that.All any meter does is measure light, it then converts it into camera settings. What matters is what you point it at, how you convert the reading, and how you interpret that in relation to your particular camera/lens/sensor and requirements.
As you know though importantly it measures the light falling on the subject. Not reflected from it.I am aware on the drawbacks of taking a reflected reading from the subject, and how an incident reading eliminates that variable. It does this by measuring the light source, and applying a conversion factor (ie the invercone/white diffuser) which reduces the light to the equivalent of 18% grey.
In that sense it is no different to taking a reflected light reading off an 18% grey card, or by taking a similar reading off the palm of your hand and adding 1.3 stops, or off a white card and adding three stops, etc etc - any tone will do so long as it is known and the appropriate compensation factor is applied.
That is exactly the same as taking an incident reading with a hand meter, or if you prefer, you can use one of the many diffusers sold to fit over the lens - that converts the camera to an incident meter directly, without any compensation necessary. Or you can just hold three layers of Tesco Value copier paper over the lens - same difference.
While an incident reading should always be consistent, and will peg 18% grey to the middle of your tone range, that might not always be where you want it for optimum exposure. It's always going to be pretty damn close of course, and is perfect for shooting slide film for which it was originally invented (because with slides there is no opportunity to modify anything in printing/post processing). But it is usually not the best exposure for shooting negative film, and neither is it usually absolutely optimum for digital - hence the Expose To The Right technnique which will quite likely yield exposure settings two stop higher than an incident meter will indicate. Two stops is a heck of a lot to throw away if you want the absolutely best result the sensor can record and deliver.
If you are correct in saying that you have the latitude of 1-2 stops (which I'm not arguing with), use the incident meter to expose for the highlights in a high contrast scene and you should be fine. As you say it's understanding what you point at that allows you to understand the process. I do not advocate changing the meter in this way and it should be used more where you have the time to tweak exposures - not on a busy shoot where you want consistent exposures.]You can attempt to apply a correction factor to an incident reading to better exploit the potential of ETTR, but that is a very dangerous game as you're pushing things to the limit and every subject is different. The only way to know that you have not exceeded the limit is to read and understand the histogram/blinkies.
If you meter for the highlights, you won't get blinkies. To use a reflected meter, you therefore need to expose for the highlights and then guess the amount of EC, check and reshoot to check.... and so on (depending on your knowledge) - Use a Light Meter, expose for the highlights and go (flash may be required for fill in a high contrast situation but this would depend on what you shoot).Which brings us back to the LCD, which is an absolute indicator of actual exposure, with no guesswork involved, rather than the 'best estimate' which is all the meter can ever do, incident or reflected. That is the ultimate arbiter of 'optimum' exposure, however you want to define that. It is not always easy to read the LCD/histogram/blinkies, but if you understand what's happening, all the necessary information is there.
Other variables. Vignetting - shoot wide-angle zoom at low f/numbers and the corners of the image will be two stops down on the centre, so what is the correct exposure for that? Correct exposure will be what the incident meter tells you. Vignetting is an unfortunate downfall of some lenses although it is much reduced with crop sensors.
In theory, f/16 is one stop down from f/11 - except that if the diaphragm blades are fractionally out, like 1/10th mm through mechanical inaccuracy, it could be half a stop different.
Does f/5.6 with an L prime look the same as f/5.6 on a consumer zoom? No, f/numbers are theoretical, not actual - add a third of a stop. What is ISO400? The subject of some debate between manufacturers, but basically there is no agreed ISO standard and some of them stretch the truth to the point of porkies - half a stop potential varianace there.
What this boils down to, is that the LCD image and its associated aids takes everything into account. It is an actual recording. If you like what you see, then lock the settings in manual. You just don't need a hand meter to get you there.
It's important not to confuse consistency with accuracy. Or to think that an incident reading is any different to a reflected reading from a known tone. Or to confuse convenience with capability.
I have only ever used mine in the way I described above ie for off camera flash. I might give it a go in some other situations. I had really major problems at my brother's wedding about a month ago as it was VERY bright sunlight. It might have been interesting to see what difference the meter came up with.
I think I doAlthough always open to new ways of thinking but I think your arguments are flawed.
Almost essential for flash particularly with multi flash setups - And certainly a requirement to get bang on consistent results even with ambient light.
Not sure I agree but I'm reading one and answering as I go.
I agree with that.
As you know though importantly it measures the light falling on the subject. Not reflected from it.
THe difference here is when you take your reading from the card you then need to see where the exposure is and adjust it. THis can take time - at a wedding I'd rather press a button and be told than have to flaff around. Also taking readings helps you understand the light.
What covers are you talking about? I've not seen these? Only cover I have is the expodisk and I use that for WB correction. I can't see how a reflected meter can be changed to an incident one though?
I mentioned that above I think - Expose to the Right is easily done in the meter. If you know you have 1-2 stops extra, just calibrate the meter to +1 or whatever exposure and every exposure you take will be that consistent amount over the correct exposure. Only problem there is there are times when you don't want to take a chance with this - i,e when shooting weddings!
If you are correct in saying that you have the latitude of 1-2 stops (which I'm not arguing with), use the incident meter to expose for the highlights in a high contrast scene and you should be fine. As you say it's understanding what you point at that allows you to understand the process. I do not advocate changing the meter in this way and it should be used more where you have the time to tweak exposures - not on a busy shoot where you want consistent exposures.
If you meter for the highlights, you won't get blinkies. To use a reflected meter, you therefore need to expose for the highlights and then guess the amount of EC, check and reshoot to check.... and so on (depending on your knowledge) - Use a Light Meter, expose for the highlights and go (flash may be required for fill in a high contrast situation but this would depend on what you shoot).
How would most of us know this? And how often do you think anyone considers it?
Whilst I'm not arguing these points, I don't see that it's "that" relevant in most situations. Half a stop is not a lot and with consistent exposures be the +/- a half stop, a quick batch in Lightroom will sort it and you can adjust the next time with that setup. If you do notice consistent under/over exposure with a particular lens or camera it's easy to bring this into the equation by adding/reducing exposure by calibrating your meter.
But it seems getting to that exposure is the issue. Fine if you have the time to play around but in the speed of an event it doesn't make sense and is just much quicker and erasier to press a button and go. Know your equipment and all will fall into place.
This is a point that I could also partly agree with. But your view of accuracy may not be mine. You are in some cases looking to over expose certain images and bring that exposure back in post processing to reduce noise (the basis of ETTR) - Not saying that's wrong but your idea of an accurate exposure may be different to others. I do agree with your points about that understanding what you are shooting and knowing the scene and reading the histogram etc etc but by doing this you will waste a lot of time.
For me therefore the important thing is to trade off the points you note. Accuracy/convenience, Time/Money etc etc....Software is so advanced now that a slight under/over exposure is rarely an issue.
i recently bought one, and I found that the lightmeter told me exactly what the camera did when I was metering off my hand and exposing by +1, but it does help me in tricky lighting situations when I have to balance a few different light sources.

Cheers Denyer![]()
I am aware of that, and have referred to it before. But I don't bring it up much because whether exposure meters are calibrated to 12% or 18% grey only adds confusion and, ultimately, it's irrelevant if you work to the LCD/histogram (which is the key to optimum exposure, however you care to define that). There is no such thing as 'correct' exposure - there is acceptable/good exposure, which is what you'll always get using an incident light reading, but there is better/optimum exposure if you work on it a bit, according to the subject and the result you want (we're talking quite fine differences here!).
It does however suggest that with a digital sensor that has more dynamic range than seven stops (the standard used as a basis for film exposures) then working from 12% exploits a bit more headroom beyond seven stops than 18% does, kind of a bit of built-in 'expose to the right'.
But it's all far from clear, and that link doesn't explain much. References to Ansel Adams, who shot on large format negative film, are completely irrelevant to digital. What calibration figures are manufacturers actually using? I believe they are coy about it because if by default they are adding additional exposure in their suggested settings, then the impression that users might get is that the true ISO is lower than it is. Which might not be a correct impression but it's still bad marketing.
At the end of the day, getting the exposure right is about creating a good looking image, the best you can make it. A meter is only a tool, only a rough guide really, to help you get that. The histogram tells you exactly what has been actually recorded, and the more data you can cram on to it, the more photons and the less noise (higher signal to noise ratio) you can get, the better. When you look at the graph, all the black areas above the graph are wasted areas of data collection, and there is massively more recording potential on the right hand side than there is on the left - it is not a linear scale. So pushing the histogram to the right with more exposure will record more information. Of course the image will then probably look too bright, but when you darken it down again in post processing, you get better tone sepatation, more shadow detail, and less noise. (Just to be clear, you need to shoot Raw with ETTR technique, and post process the files to darken them.)
Given the foregoing it might be hard to believe, but I really don't want to go on about it. I just wanted to correct the idea that somehow a hand meter was some kind of magic weapon, and that incident readings are always abosolutely optimum. To repeat, there is nothing that a hand meter can do that you can't do with the built-in meter (manual flash metering excepted) and there are lots of things it cannot do. And an incident reading will always be good (especially if you only shoot JPEGs) and always consistent, but rarely optimum.

Sorry Richard but that is a totally inaccurate. An incident meter records the light falliing on the subject and should be metered from the subject towards the light source. b****r all to to with the camera.![]()
Sorry Richard but that is a totally inaccurate. An incident meter records the light falliing on the subject and should be metered from the subject towards the light source. b****r all to to with the camera.![]()
Only if you are an Anglo![]()
Another chapter from "Gone with the wind"![]()
Actually, the palm of your hand is quite a consistent tone between races. A 'black' hand has a slight advantage in that it usually requires zero compensation.
lol I am paying attention Richard, particularly to the bit where you say an incident meter is trying to measure the light entering the lens which is utter poppycock (always wanted to use that word!) It's measuring the light falling on the subject as metered with the meter pointing towards the light source.
If I don't have it on me then I sometimes use a technique where, still using evaluative metering, I zoom right in on the part of the image I want correctly exposed and meter off that. But for things like window lit portraits, give me a blooming incident meter any day!![]()
I prefer taking photographs.
In the majority of situations I find my eye and a quick check of the first shot on the LCD / with the histogram is plenty good enough.
And all I'll add is that the only times I've used a light meter (in the studio) because someone told me I absolutely had too everything came out too hot for me. I'd rather check the histogram and chimp.
The difference between exposure choices is what provides different results from different people. Quite the "I am right and you are wrong".
The flexibility surrounding the mid point exposure means that you can be a stop either side and still get a perfectly reasonable result.....if you only want the highlights "correct" or are happy for the highlights to blow and the shadows are more important....depends on the subject, but more importantly, the mood of the photographer and how they want to portray what is in front of them.
An incident reading is taken by measuring the light falling on the subject.
A reflected reading is taken be measuring the light reflected off the subject.
Simple as that, whether you use a hand meter or a built in one. It is a bit difficult to take a true incident reading with a built in meter though....metering off a grey card is a reflected reading. Full stop. It is measuring the reflected light off the card, so is NOT an incident reading, it is a reflected reading - just from a known mid tone, thats all. You could use concrete wall, hand, face, grey jumper, grass - all much the same and certainly close enough!![]()
The only way to get optimum exposure is the interrogate the histogram.