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Tips on exposure please.


TacTZilla

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I tend to make use of the semi-spot character of the meter by scanning the highlights and shadows of the scene and taking the exposure from there. Alternatively there is the option of finding a zone V area in the image and taking that for the basic exposure.

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Since I'm not all that intuitive sometimes on a scene, I might start in A mode and take a reading at my preferred F stop from the area of the scene that is most important to me. So if I have selected f/4 and the camera in A shows me 1/250 at that point, I may then switch to M, knowing that my base exposure is f/4 at 1/250, and change F stops or shutter to suit the effect I am looking for (e.g. depth of field, etc). So I guess I am using the camera's built in meter as an exposure meter. Then with a bit of chimping I can see whether I want to deviate from the base. Maybe that is clumsy or simplistic but it is what works for me.

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Won't work if you set the camera to " soft release" which vastly improves the shutter.

 

I also have the M9 almost always in soft/discrete mode.

 

I have found that setting a permanent +2/3 +1.0 exposure compensation on the M9 in A mode, gives me raw files with fully preserved highlights and maximum shadow detail.

 

For critical exposures, I always watch the camera histogram to make sure that the exposure is aligned completely to the right of the histogram.

 

On my sample of the M9 I have one more EV/f-stop to go, when the histogram is completely to the right, which gives maximum highlight preservation, while still giving most details and lowest possible noise in the dark areas.

 

Tone curve and overall exposure can then be adjusted to taste in LightRoom, CameraRaw, CaptureOne or your favorite raw converter.

 

Best regards

 

Trond

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If you wouldn't mind sharing, how do you go about getting the correct (whatever correct is) exposure in manual mode?

 

Any tips would be most welcome.

 

Regards

Bob

 

The light meter is strongly centered. Target whatever brightness level you want/like, lightly touch the button to turn on the meter, turn the time dial and >, o ,< leds will home you. From the o setting you can add exposure offset +/- as you want in half clicks

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Won't work if you set the camera to " soft release" which vastly improves the shutter.

Strange but I am so used to the M8 shutter that I do not use the soft release except in very specific situations.

I use mainly A mode, with 2/3 compensation on a grey day (like almost everyday currently :( ) and 0 or 1/3 on a sunny day.

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Hi Tac,

If I may make a suggestion, this based on assuming that you are somewhat of a novice in this wonderful and mysterious world of photography.

Locate a copy of Fred Picker's "The Zone VI Workshop". It is probably one the simplest, or at least one offering a clear explanation of the Zone System, and the Zone System will help clarify the use of exposure and allow you to learn to visualize your final print. Even though it was originally written and intended for film, it is quite applicable for the digital format; with some slight modifications. I also know that there are some great articles out there on the web on the use of the Zone System for the digital camera.

Good luck!

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It isn't really hard. Try to meter on something which is neutral grey (because your meter measures everything as if it is 13-18% grey), and in the same light as the items you are intending to incorporate in your photo and you will generally nail the overall exposure for the scene you are shooting. The zone system, mentioned earlier is worth learning, but perhaps even more so is the "Sunny 16 rule", where you think in terms of an exposure in bright sunlight which is the equivalent of the shutter speed being the reciprocal of the ISO, and your diaphragm is set to f16, you give one stop greater exposure if the lighting is overcast, two if cloudy, three if you can't see any shadows at all, four if it is really gloomy. If you can nail this concept you'll almost always know if you are metering correctly, except in very poor lighting situations.

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I tend to make use of the semi-spot character of the meter by scanning the highlights and shadows of the scene and taking the exposure from there. Alternatively there is the option of finding a zone V area in the image and taking that for the basic exposure.

 

Probably a stupid question: What is a zone V area :confused: ?

 

Åmund

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Jaap, what you mean for "vastly improves the shutter".

I might been off for a while, but I'd like to know where's the improvement with the soft release (which I tend not to use).

Stupidly I've been in Oslo with Riccis (which was using the soft release) and I never asked him why too.

 

ciao,

M.

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Soft release on the M9 is not a thingy, Maurizio. it is a function where the shutter releases at the first pressure point instead of the second, turning it into a bit of a hair trigger. Obviously AE lock is disabled in that mode. I like hair triggers on cameras. Much more responsive.

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