If I wanted to do a multi-spot metering of a scene with a large contrast of 2 to 3 different lighting, how do I use the spot meter in my camera? Do I just average out the scene, and hope for the best? What about bracketing the shot?
If I wanted to do a multi-spot metering of a scene with a large contrast of 2 to 3 different lighting, how do I use the spot meter in my camera? Do I just average out the scene, and hope for the best? What about bracketing the shot?
What camera/handheld meter do you have? I have Canon EOS3 which can measure spot (if 3 degrees of Canon "spot" can be called real spot metering)on 8 different points of scene. I tried to fool it several times, but failed, camera had virtually allways "perfect" exposure.
I would do as Roger said. Have in mind that negative film can "capture" about 5 stops contrast range, so if your darkest and lightest parts are in 5 stops, you should have fine negative using yours standard developing. If contrast range is more than 5 stops, then you should think about zone system...
Thanks, this is exactly the information I'm looking for. I use an EOS 3 too, and I'm trying to learn how to use its spot meter capabilities.
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