I'm just a little curious as to how folks meter their scenes. I'm mainly interested in incident readings, but also reflected style differs by many folks too. When I started I only had a cheap old GE meter and used only reflected readings. I didn't know anything about the Zone System so I just pointed the damn thing at my subject and shot at what it said. Most of the time my shot of the great outdoors came out fine or the metered close portrait, but some stuff I shot where the lighting was a little wacky didn't come out the way I thought it should. I blamed the cheap meter, the lab since I didn't process my own. I went for a few years like that and then bought a Norwood Directors meter, which is now called the Sekonic 398 I believe. I learned to read in incident only and notice almost all my shots came out better. Then the apple cart got upset when I took a college course on the Zone System and everything went back to reflected, mainly spot, metering. I got a new Luna Pro and started over again. It worked and worked fine if you remembered what to do and what to meter. After a period I started into weddings and then used mainly a flash meter. Once I retired from that I went back to enjoying photography for myself. I bought a Luna Star F meter that has incident and a 5 degree spot attachment and still use itt. I've only used the incident dome of late and seem to get by just fine with the materials and processing style I use. Now, the question is how do other folks meter a using their incident meters. Say, for and average "high in the sky" sunny summer day with puffy white clouds?
P.S. Sorry for being long winded, but the damn coffee made me do it!
P.S. Sorry for being long winded, but the damn coffee made me do it!
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