Note what your eye thinks is 'middle tone' vs. what a spotmeter finds...
Excellent illustration; thanks for posting that. It's precisely what I referred to earlier.
Note what your eye thinks is 'middle tone' vs. what a spotmeter finds...
I use the multispot metering on the OM-4, and while my Minolta Spotmeter F can average two readings, it does not have multi-spot capability.
The Canon EOS 3 and digital Canon EOS-1D C has multispot capability
Note that only three color patches exactly matched the 18% gray reference value.
Are there any handheld meters with a matrix mode?
I can see how useful this is. My wife bought an Olympus micro 4/3 some years ago - I wasn’t impressed! But it has its uses as you point out. I do prefer porting around only a light meter though - as opposed to a second camera.
I much prefer Nikon's matrix metering. It never let me down!
significant underexposure of the 18% gray card and exposure bias for the sky..
except for the extreme case depicted via my test.
Years ago I conducted an experiment with Canon dSLR to assess various available metering capabilities. Here is the result...
Control shot: handheld spotmeter on 18% gray card
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Evaluative (Canon matrix metering)
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All the other modes tested (metering biased to AF point, Center-weighted, Partial, etc.) also resulted in significant underexposure of the 18% gray card and exposure bias for the sky..
Admittedly, when the desire is to take a shot with little to no forethought, Evaluative does a prettty good job except for the extreme case depicted via my test.
None of analog cameras have histogram display
Ok, so far we have about...three (?) people with hands-on experience with the question asked, correct? That's interesting; I would have expected there would be more people using multi-spot metering built into one of the few cameras that have this functionality (Canon T90, two digital EOS cameras: a 1 model & 3, Olympus OM3 & OM4 - any more?).
I think now it would cost more not so much for the circuitry but for the buttons and display needed to do that.
Sounds like few here have taken advantage of it.
The Olympus OM-4 and OM-3 were the first to have built in spotmeter (I think) and they can do an average of several readings. All modern cameras have spotmetering but none I know has the averaging function. My handheld spotmeter has the function but I never used it. I wonder if anyone uses it?
The Leica M5 has what amounts to a spot meter built in.
The Leica M5 has what amounts to a spot meter built in.
Great many cameras have spot meter built in (almost all new cameras have this capability) but very few have the ability to average several spotmeter readings. Even with today digital camera with computing power much more powerful than a mainframe back in the 70's they just don't have this function. My question is why the averaging of several spot readings isn't common.
IMO it's just an unnecessary complexity. Cameras for decades have been capable of appropriate results both negatives & transparencies. Not everything that's possible is necessary.
Ok, so far we have about...three (?) people with hands-on experience with the question asked, correct? That's interesting; I would have expected there would be more people using multi-spot metering built into one of the few cameras that have this functionality (Canon T90, two digital EOS cameras: a 1 model & 3, Olympus OM3 & OM4 - any more?).
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