Ouch, somebody mentioned Pentax cameras...like these?
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However, after the LX the best is the K2DMD, unfortunately it's also one of the most expensive, even more than Her Black Majesty.
However, to be truthful, since I have just made those settings, I know what they are already. As a result I very rarely even see them when I am composing. I would say never, but since I know that they are there, I must have looked at them at some point.
I disagree. An incident meter is better (more consistent, and easier to use) than a reflected meter. The incident meter "knows" how much light is lighting the subject. The reflected meter is easily fooled by the subject itself. Of course, you need to use your judgement and compensate accordingly, but with the incident meter the task is far far easier.
Cine photographers and studio photographers all use incident metering, not reflected.
The original comment only dealt with an external meter, there was no mention of incident or reflected. If you are working in a studio and can walk right up to your subject while it stands there and waits for you to take a reading, and if you are working with artificial light that isn't changing every second with clouds and haze obscuring the sun, then an incident meter may be the "best" way to determine the lighting on the exact spot you want to expose for. But I have never had a bear, moose, elk or bird that was willing to be so accommodating to my photography, nor a landscape that had a single metering point anywhere within walking distance. Since the original poster is new to film photography, there is no call to confuse him with theoretical niceties rather than practical advice.
Using an incident meter on snow will still give you overexposed snow. Using an incident meter on a coal black steam engine will still give you an underexposed steam engine..
I'm really surprised that we have such kind of discussion in APUG, i would have expected that the advantages and usage of an incident meter were obvious.
Practical advice when shooting a bear, moose, elk or bird is simple -- they are most likely also under the same sun as you and in the open field; thus, use the incident meter on you, as if you were the bear/moose/elk/bird, no need to approach the subject. Obvious.
Not so easy man...
Just to make an example of target under shadow in a sunny day.
...think sunny 16 rule + compensation for subject under shadow..
Using the reflected meter on snow you will get gray snow. Using the incident meter on snow will render the snow really really bright, which is how snow looks under the sun (and can make your eyes hurt). Your eyes themselves get "overexposed" when looking at bright snow (!)
Using a reflected meter on a coal black steam engine will give you an overexposed steam engine, will render that black to grey. Using the incident meter the coal black will stay black... If you want to pump up the shadow detail then it's up to you to compensate.
I'm really surprised that we have such kind of discussion in APUG, i would have expected that the advantages and usage of an incident meter were obvious.
You must have really odd snow and matte black surfaces in South America; either that or your eyes evolve differently south of the equator. For most of the world, filled with normal folks with normal eyes, our vision accommodates the brightness of the subject being observed. The human eye also has a nonlinear response to light. This is well documented and is mimicked to some extent by film. When the eye looks at snow, it does not see a blindingly white, featureless expanse. It perceives light and shadow, texture and shape, all of which can be reproduced in a properly exposed photograph. When the eye looks at a pile of coal it does not see an undifferentiated mass of black. One can see a rich panoply of shapes, forms and reflectivity which can also captured in a properly exposed photograph. In neither case will the subject be "grey"; it will be rendered to look as it looked to the eye and the brain.
Perhaps you are surprised that we would have this kind of discussion because you are in the habit of making blanket statements the are patently wrong. The "advantages and usage of an incident meter" are far from obvious. In matter of fact, incident meters have severe drawbacks both in practicality and utility, which is why their use has always been limited to a small subset of photographers who work in extremely limited and controlled environments.
Snow blindness is an option as you go further south...You must have really odd snow and matte black surfaces in South America; either that or your eyes evolve differently south of the equator. For most of the world, filled with normal folks with normal eyes, our vision accommodates the brightness of the subject being observed. The human eye also has a nonlinear response to light. This is well documented and is mimicked to some extent by film. When the eye looks at snow, it does not see a blindingly white, featureless expanse. It perceives light and shadow, texture and shape, all of which can be reproduced in a properly exposed photograph. When the eye looks at a pile of coal it does not see an undifferentiated mass of black. One can see a rich panoply of shapes, forms and reflectivity which can also captured in a properly exposed photograph. In neither case will the subject be "grey"; it will be rendered to look as it looked to the eye and the brain.
Perhaps you are surprised that we would have this kind of discussion because you are in the habit of making blanket statements the are patently wrong. The "advantages and usage of an incident meter" are far from obvious. In matter of fact, incident meters have severe drawbacks both in practicality and utility, which is why their use has always been limited to a small subset of photographers who work in extremely limited and controlled environments.
The "best" meter in the widest real world circumstances would be an OM-4 spot meter using the OTF function. This allows control of both the metering area of the subject as well as its reflectance.
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