Diapositivo
Subscriber
Actually its says if your subject is quite light(???) then decrease exposure by 1/2 to 1 stop and if subject is quite dark(???) then increase your exposure by 1/2 to 1 stop. Thats a lot of use to people using slide film and only marginally better for people using negative film.
??? What does quite light and quite dark mean. I presume it measn high or low contrast but how high or how low. Its just another pointless ball park guesstimate approach.
I presume it means so high as to be near the toe (when you use slide film) or so dark as to risk to block shadows.
That's exactly the same advice given with incident light meters.
If you have a grey cat and you measure exposure with the grey card (or the grey cat) everything is fine and dandy.
But if you have a white cat (one of those who seem to have come out from the washer) and you use an incident light meter (or the grey card method) you end up placing the cat somewhere in a zone of your slide film which might not have a very good rendition of the texture.
So you decrease a bit the exposure.
That's normal practice when photographing flour, sugar, snow, bride dress etc.
People will instantly know it's a white subject and will compensate, in their brain, for the slight hint of grey. But that slight hint of grey will allow you to record all the texture very clearly.
It all sums up with the fact that the measure of the incident light meter (which is what is attempted when using a grey card) works very well for normal subjects but can lead to trouble with non-normal subjects (high contrast of illumination, high reflectivity ratio, high-key subject, low-key subject). Those are all situations where the subject can "fall" outside of the best zone of rendition and only a spot meter gives you certitudes. IMHO.