Lesley Jones
Otherwise know as Zooey
I think that's what it's called. I came from a place with some VERY good photographers and metering for zone 4 or zone 6 seems to be the in thing. First of all, can I assume this whole idea started a long time ago - possibly with Ansel Adams? If it is the same as the zones from 0 to 10 that I see when using Silver FX to convert, then I get the basics. 0 is blocked and 10 is blown. Fine.
A one degree spot meter - I'm not so sure about this one. I have a choice of metering on my camera and I would only use the spot meter if I had a model in an odd lighting situation and getting her skin right was the most important thing. Are these spot meters on the top end cameras, or are we talking about a different piece of kit?
Now comes the really silly part. Ignoring studio lighting (of which I am totally ignorant), outside you only have the light that is there. For the moment I will ignore the soft muted kind and go for a sunset on a beach. So our eyes can take in the colours of the sky and the detail of the rocks at our feet in shadow. A digital camera can't, so you have to choose which bit is most important. Either that, or try and pull what detail you can from one exposure, or somehow blend multiple exposures.
Seeing as we have some flexibility here and of course, you can play with the levels and darken shadows, brighten highlights and drag the mid tones up and down... what is the point of such accurate metering? I've done the beach thing and even three exposures, two stops apart, don't quite capture all the detail without a bit more fiddling. I check the histogram at the scene and decide which bracketed set gives me the best options.
I've either misunderstood, or I just don't get it
A one degree spot meter - I'm not so sure about this one. I have a choice of metering on my camera and I would only use the spot meter if I had a model in an odd lighting situation and getting her skin right was the most important thing. Are these spot meters on the top end cameras, or are we talking about a different piece of kit?
Now comes the really silly part. Ignoring studio lighting (of which I am totally ignorant), outside you only have the light that is there. For the moment I will ignore the soft muted kind and go for a sunset on a beach. So our eyes can take in the colours of the sky and the detail of the rocks at our feet in shadow. A digital camera can't, so you have to choose which bit is most important. Either that, or try and pull what detail you can from one exposure, or somehow blend multiple exposures.
Seeing as we have some flexibility here and of course, you can play with the levels and darken shadows, brighten highlights and drag the mid tones up and down... what is the point of such accurate metering? I've done the beach thing and even three exposures, two stops apart, don't quite capture all the detail without a bit more fiddling. I check the histogram at the scene and decide which bracketed set gives me the best options.
I've either misunderstood, or I just don't get it
