ghache
No longer a newbie, moving up!
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Terboucharge is actually very correct in regards to what constitutes the clinical definition of "exposure". In the context of this thread, however, and in the act of setting your camera to make your exposure...Kerbouchard cannot disagree that ISO/ASA is indeed a variable that is used to calculate the outcome of your exposure. What he is doing, is exactly like others that claim light from a flash unit is "natural light". It's very specific semantics.
Sorry, but the term "Exposure" pre-dates Bryan Peterson's books by well over 150 years. What we have is a bunch of newbies without ANY scientific background attempting to hijack a basic technical term, and add on additional "meaning" where it is, frankly, impermissible to do so, from the point of scientific accuracy. Sorry, but the people who are losing the battle of semantics are those who are attempting to co-opt an integral term of the science of photography and to dumb it down by piling on **** that has no place in the discussion. This is what happens when people with no education in the history or science of photography need to learn how to get a camera off of automatic mode--people like Bryan Peterson "invent" cool graphics to help newbies understand CAMERA SETTINGS.
Bryan Peterson coined the graphic, a triangle, and in it it had terms like "grain"... grain does not have a fricking THING to do with "Exposure"..sorry, but the "Exposure Triangle" is like Roy GVib...it is a device to help newbies understand camera settings...just as Roy GVib is an aid to helping students memorize the colors of the spectrum...
I cannot agree that in the "context of this thread", the meaning of the term "Exposure" can be changed to fit the understanding of people who learned photography since 2004...
We cannot start defining f/stop as "the light-letting-in-hole", so that newbies understand it better....we cannot start calling Guide Number, "the flash power divided by feet to the subject equals f/number thingy", so that newbies can better grasp what a Guide Number helps do....or can we?
:lmao: