Ysarex
Been spending a lot of time on here!
- Joined
- Nov 27, 2011
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- St. Louis
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Pretty sure I said I use the light meter to get within a third of a stop quickly, and then adjust with a bit of fine tuning after that. I don't know where I ever said that I'd just take a WAG right off the bat.
My big problem is a sort of complete trust some people put in light meters. I've seen people literally look at a bad exposure and just say "well, that's what the light meter said." That's what I was taking a position against. I think people don't realize how far off light meters can be in certain situations.
Direct quote from the OP:
"...why you really can't just get a light meter value, program your settings and roll with it today. I use light meters to get me in the ballpark, but after calibrating the LCD and knowing how to read a histogram, I use those more than the light meter as a 'final guide' to how I want things."
For any very serious number of shots with multiple lights I'd use my light meter every single time. I'd just make the final adjustments based on looking at the calibrated LCD and histogram.
Although, on the other hand I have talked to a pro who pretty much never uses a light meter... Joe McNally.
The histogram on the camera LCD is derived from the camera/software processed JPEG and as such does not represent the sensor raw capture. I'll take my meter reading, my assessment of the lighting condition and the sensor raw capture and swat down anything the camera software produces all the time and every time.
Joe