srichards
Suspended / Banned
- Messages
- 10,968
- Name
- Suz
- Edit My Images
- Yes
First roll through the TLR and I chose incident. Waved the light meter around and went with what it said. It's not too bad. I metered where the camera was ie where I was standing figuring the light is falling where the camera is so it can't be too wrong. I went with incident as it is a generally 'it's this bright' kind of reading method. Skies do seem a bit washed out so I reckon it has over exposed a bit but that may have been partly down to me choosing to err on over exposure rather than under. I can't remember whether the sky was a decent blue or the hazy cloudy ick it appears to be in the photos. Shots without sky in look right and roughly how it was on the day.
Any thoughts?
The other idea was to just use the phone and one of the light meter apps with the idea that if I point it roughly what I shall be taking a photo of it won't be too far out.
How do you meter correctly for scenes you don't actually have physical access to? It's all very well saying meter from the subject and point back at the camera but if that subject is a landscape flipping miles away then by the time you've tramped over to the nice bit of rock you are exposing for and tramped back the light will have changed
What is the best way of getting something decent the majority of the time?
Any thoughts?
The other idea was to just use the phone and one of the light meter apps with the idea that if I point it roughly what I shall be taking a photo of it won't be too far out.
How do you meter correctly for scenes you don't actually have physical access to? It's all very well saying meter from the subject and point back at the camera but if that subject is a landscape flipping miles away then by the time you've tramped over to the nice bit of rock you are exposing for and tramped back the light will have changed
What is the best way of getting something decent the majority of the time?