Photographers should keep their palms out of the sun.![]()
Not so. Just put a Styrofoam cup over the lens, and point it to where the camera will be. Instant incident meter. Wins hands down -- I mean palms down.
Funnily enough, I have seen probably 1000s of people sunbathing over the course of my life and I can't recall seeing any doing it palms upwards. I can't think of many outdoor jobs either that causes hands to be in a palm up position for more than a second of so
I have seen some pretty bad examples of severe sunburn and tanning but never a sunburned palm
My conclusion: Palms tend not change much over the 4 seasons
pentaxuser
Styrofoam isn't biodegradable; palms are.
Just a joke. One is not supposed to use and throw out non-biodegradable products. Alternatives to styrofoam are being sought. In this area, styrofoam cups have been banned at coffee shops.
I think I'll keep a styrofoam cup in mind if I happen to be close to a cafe or a fast food place with coffee, only I forgot my incident meter, and apply a +1EV understanding about the cup reading, just like my palm!
Just a joke. One is not supposed to use and throw out non-biodegradable products. Alternatives to styrofoam are being sought. In this area, styrofoam cups have been banned at coffee shops.
Any geneticist or dermatologist would probably look at you crosseyed.
...well, according to multiple test readings I have done on different days, the f/16 Rule of Thumb is a really fat thumb...
Finding a post I made years ago,
"at N38 degrees latitude, 1pm, in my back yard, with the incident light meter hemisphere held horizontal (aimed 'at the lens')...ISO 100, 1/100 f/16.0, and moving full circle the meter deviated to +0.1EV and -1.9EV"
Kodak says for their "Sunny 16" rule that the sun is behind you and the picture is taken between 10am and 4pm.
Now that says 'boring' to me much more than any bisectioinal horizon in a competing interminable thread.
I decided to check my Home Depot paint chip theory. I tested a never used gray card, two acrylic gray cards, a Munsell gray scale and several of the paint chips. All were in a windowless room with 5500k lighting and placed on a small easel so they would be at the same angle. I used two different Pentax digital spot meters focused through the spot circle and used the same battery in each. All read the same or within less than one half a stop. The paint chip reading the same as Munsell and acrylic cards was the Behr Ancestral ppu24-05 but several others were very close less than a half stop. Since use Delta 400 no problem.
Not a scientific study but it was easy and the poster who was looking for the cheapest solution this might work since the samples are free.
I use black and white film Delta 120 400iso and HP5 4x5 both at box speed and process with D76 or PMK pyro or occasionally Ilfotec. The light meters have the zone scales and the readings all came out to zone 7 or just past less than half a stop towards zone 6 This has worked well for me for some 50 years. When I rarely use color film I use an incident meter and don’t process myself if digital mostly family snapshots I let the camera do the setting either aperture or shutter speed depending on the situation I’m not sure filming all the gray cards together will work since they are different sizes and putting them on a background might influence the setting. I don’t have a macro lens so that part of the test might not be accurate Maybe someone reading these posts will try what you suggested.
Wilt. If you are near a Home Depot or a paint shop you can find them. The one that matched the best was Behr Ancestral ppu24-05. My guess is that other brands have similar swatches and may even have or will make sample bottles if that’s of interest.
I have no idea what your criteria of choice for your test samples...for example why there was 0.5EV deviation from 18% gray card reading. I though a parallel test of same gray card selection, but used for Color Balance, would be valuable insight.
Perhaps if you simply list which samples (color number on card, brand paint) I could select same ones.
I have no idea what your criteria of choice for your test samples...for example why there was 0.5EV deviation from 18% gray card reading. I though a parallel test of same gray card selection, but used for Color Balance, would be valuable insight.
Perhaps if you simply list which samples (color number on card, brand paint) I could select same ones.
I happened to be in Home Depot and selected twelve swatches that looked like they would be close to my existing gray cards. All were Behr Dynasty Marquee line: dawn gray, imperial gray, dawn, gray, imperial gray, antique tin, ocean swell, euro gray, lengandry gray, and the Ancestral ppi-24-05. I was just doing this out of curiosity to see if any matched the gray cards I have been using for years I thought reading with spot meters under constant illumination at the same angle would be interesting and see if my light meters agreed with each other. And since the original post was looking for a cheap gray card it might be an answer. You might want to do it more scientifically and give us all a better answer
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