So if you spend a week at high altitude in high UV conditions, how much melanin is produced using an SFP 30 sunblock lotion versus SPF 50, and what
precise percent does that skew your gray card surrogate? Does it need sunblock too? Cause gray cards do fade.
The PALM does not tan readily...in fact it is almost the same tone for Caucasions, Asians, Blacks, you name it. The tan is on the BACK of the hand. And that is
why three decades ago -- in the infancy of the public use of the internet! --I read the suggestion (regardless of the racial background of the photographer) was to meter the PALM of the hand as a +1EV surrogate to an 18% grey card.
However, in posting on this point over the years, I note that I had written in APUG postings...
- In Oct 2010 I posted, "I metered my own palm vs. 18% gray card and measured precisely +1.3EV difference."
- In Jan 2012 I posted, "The palm of my hand meters +1.5EV brighter than an 18% gray card. "
- in Nov 2104 I posted, "And in Jan 2012, in writing a post about palm metering on APUG, I had metered my own palm with a Minolta F 1-degree spotmeter and found it to be +1.5EV brighter than the gray card! Doing it just now, I find the difference to be only +1.1EV "
- in Nov 2015 I posted, "However, my own palm actually meters 1.33EV brighter...Asian"
- in Nov 2016 I posted, "I have actually measured +1.3EV brighter."
...so my own palm does exhibit variability (my comments on each occasion above was always with a new grey card reading and a new reading of my own palm, measured by the brightness difference function of my Minolta Spotmeter F). But 0.4EV difference (as noted in 2014) is different than my own tanning...in summer I see a very marked dividing line between the palm vs. back of my hand, whereas right now it is very faintly different...I can look almost as dark as a Hawaiian islander in the summer!
In Jan 2012 Jim Noel posted on APUG,
"No matter the ethnicity of a person, meter their palm, place it on Zone VI and their skin should record correctly. More than 30 years ago two friend and I experimented with this. I am Caucasian, one is African American and the other Hispanic. We tried varying lighting conditions, and several films. The objective was to make it easier to get proper exposure of each individual in a multi-ethnic church congregation regardless of the light. It was successful."