Sirius Glass
Subscriber
hi all, I've googled this but am even more confused after that.
When I am metering with film I have heard the term "meter for shadows, develop for highlights". Some say rate the film at half box speed, meter for shadow detail and back off negative development time by about 15%, to stop the highlights developing too much.
In practice, this will surely result in a highly over-exposed image?? I would have thought that metering for shadow detail at the box speed, or taking an ambient reading at half the box speed would have similar results, but both together would over expose?
The most common problem is that people meter too much of the sky which underexposes everything else. So I recommend:
- Shoot box speed and take the light reading of the subject without any sky or sky light measurements. This works with both slides and prints. Just skip the testing which will tell you to use about half the box speed which is a lousy way to get around the sky-sky light problem in a haphazard way.
- Get a light meter that handles the Zone System such as a Gossen Luna Pro SBC, choose the part of the subject that you want to be Middle Gray and shoot box speed. This works with both slides and prints. Just skip the testing which will tell you to use about half the box speed which is a lousy way to get around the sky-sky light problem in a haphazard way.
- Get a light meter that handles the Zone System such as a Gossen Luna Pro SBC, choose the part of the subject that you want to be a specific Zone, adjust the meter for that Zone and shoot box speed. This works with both slides and prints. Just skip the testing which will tell you to use about half the box speed which is a lousy way to get around the sky-sky light problem in a haphazard way.
- Shoot box speed and use an incident meter set to box speed and aim in the direction of the camera. This works with both slides and prints. Just skip the testing which will tell you to use about half the box speed which is a lousy way to get around the sky-sky light problem in a haphazard way.