lgrabun
Member
- Joined
- Jan 6, 2008
- Messages
- 43
- Format
- Medium Format
Hi there,
I've been wondering - having read a lot about Minolt Dynax/Maxxum 7 and it's capability of catching the right exposure most of the times - how would you meter the light, being on vacation in Portugal and having little (i.e. wife being not quite happy with you mounting a camera on a tripod, calculation exposure with the spotmetering, moving a tripod a bit to the left) time to calculate a proper exposure with a spotmeter? Would you use a decent - as they say - Minolta honeycomb metering pattern and hope for the best or use it's spotmetering function and compensate?
I am going to take a dozen or so rolls of Fuji Provia. I have some experience with this film, shooting mostly on MF; I always measure for the light, setting 160 ASA and compensate up to 2EV. The slides are always dense, properly exposed, featuring no clipped highlights. I've been questioning myself how to achieve the same effect with Dynax 7.
I've been wondering - having read a lot about Minolt Dynax/Maxxum 7 and it's capability of catching the right exposure most of the times - how would you meter the light, being on vacation in Portugal and having little (i.e. wife being not quite happy with you mounting a camera on a tripod, calculation exposure with the spotmetering, moving a tripod a bit to the left) time to calculate a proper exposure with a spotmeter? Would you use a decent - as they say - Minolta honeycomb metering pattern and hope for the best or use it's spotmetering function and compensate?
I am going to take a dozen or so rolls of Fuji Provia. I have some experience with this film, shooting mostly on MF; I always measure for the light, setting 160 ASA and compensate up to 2EV. The slides are always dense, properly exposed, featuring no clipped highlights. I've been questioning myself how to achieve the same effect with Dynax 7.