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Monthly Tips & Tutorials from Lastolite

Lesson One

Metering For Correct Exposure


Getting exposure right in camera will maintain more detail in the image.
A correct exposure is determined by a combination of the amount of light reaching the cameras sensor through the lens (aperture) and the length of time the shutter (speed) is left open. This combination will also be effected by the sensitivity of the sensor to light, which we set via the ISO setting on camera. Over Exposure This occurs when too much light is allowed to effect the sensor causing lost detail in the highlight areas of the image. The overexposure will give either a subtle loss or a more dramatic loss of detail in the highlight areas; the result will depend on how much extra light is allowed to hit the cameras sensor. Check - ISO setting, Aperture Setting, Shutter Speed

Over Exposure - Loses detail in the highlight areas. Metering can be difficult in a dramatic scene, especially when there is a domination of light or dark. Avoid auto metering modes to capture the detail you want to record, not what the camera averages.

Under Exposure This occurs when too little light is allowed to affect the cameras sensor, causing lost detail in the mid tone and shadow areas. Under exposure will give either a totally black image if the setting is less than 4 stops lower than the ambient light or an overall dark image depending on the difference from a correct exposure. Check - ISO setting, Aperture Setting, Shutter Speed

Correct Exposure This will give detail in the highlights as well as in the shadow areas of an image with a subtle transition through the general tonal range in a scene. An image may contain brighter or darker areas in the photograph, however the main subject area will contain detail with little or no loss.

Under Exposure - Loses detail and contrast Correct Exposure - captures important detail, especially in the highlight and shadow areas.

Monthly Tips & Tutorials from Lastolite

Lesson One

Key Points
Light can be measured in 2 basic ways:
Reflected the brightness of the light in the scene or bounced off the subject. the light falling on the subject or scene.

Even though a light meter is usually used to take an Incident light reading, they can also take a reflective reading when used in a different mode or with different accessories, even a spot meter reading. Reflective Metering This is the most common metering as this uses the cameras built in sensor and is perfect for landscape photography when it is impossible to take an incident reading from the subject in the distance. Instead the reflective light is measured by accessing the light levels in the scene. In DSLR's the exposure is determined by the light hitting the sensor through the lens, hence the term 'Through The Lens' metering (TTL)

Incident

A hand held meter makes exposure reading simple. Point the meter towards the ambient or flash light source.

Incident Metering This is the most accurate way to measure either the ambient light or flashlight on a subject when shooting weddings and portraiture as well as still life and product photography? This method is usually done with a light meter. A light meter is used to measure accurately the light falling on a subject, based on a calibrated sensor in the meter itself. It gives a reading based on a tone of grey, so no guess work is involved in choosing the right tone in an image to take a reflected reading off. To use a hand held meter first set it to either ambient or flash mode, hold it by the subject and point it back toward the light source. This will now give you a correct exposure based on a combination of your chosen ISO, as well as the aperture F-Stop and the shutter speed setting. Mark Cleghorn www.phototraining4u.com
Accurate exposure can be difficult with landscape photogaphy.

To take an accurate reflective meter reading takes a little more skill, as you have to be able to read the scene and decide which part of the image is going to give you the tone to record. As almost every image has highlights, mid tones and shadow areas the equation can be more confusing.

All text and photography Mark Cleghorn 2009. All rights reserved.

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