It works OK for reasonably flat scenes. For a lot of landscape work where there's a significant amount of sky, I find it's preferable if the camera also has an AE lock functionality so that a reading can be taken before recomposing the image.Whats the best practices for using centre-weighted metering for getting the exposure you want?
IIRC Miranda had some rather "spicy" advertising in the magazines. When I was a kid the barbershops kept the photo magazines out of kids reach. All I saw were fishing magazines
Understood. Well, I'd say that the proof of the negative is in the printing. So to find out what kind of negatives print easily, the most appropriate way is to start doing so.I mainly asked because while I don't currently print in the darkroom, I'd like to learn and want to produce negatives that I can go back and print easily
So it seems most manual focus film SLRs use a single centre-weighted metering pattern.
It’s likely easier to design than evaluative or matrix metering, and is more likely to be idiot-proof than spot metering (ie. if you simply point it at your subject then the likelihood of a good exposure is greater).
But discussion of a considered approach seems to be lacking, given that this meter is present in so many high quality SLRs and that the meter in your camera is the most convenient (generally). Whats the best practices for using centre-weighted metering for getting the exposure you want?
Theres plenty of topics currently on the forum on spot metering and matrix metering but relatively little for this moat common pattern. So Im curious how people here use them.
Essentially you need to become familiar with the metering system your camera has.
Start noticing in the viewfinder where in the image area an off-centre light source begins to affect the reading, and internalize that knowledge going forward.
Most scenes are pretty evenly lit, so the weighting won't make as much of a difference as unusual subject reflectance does. For the small number of unevenly lit scenes, use that information you have incorporated to determine where to point the camera when you take the reading.
Valid point. I've shot both with a center-weighted meter, but when shooting slides, evidently erring towards the side of underexposure. With neg film, the opposite.Would posters include whether they're shooting negative or positive film when describing their exposure techniques? The processes are usually quite different.
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