Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/01/30
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]>I didn't think that's what Eastland's book really says, but I re-read the >section cited and it certainly leave the impression that you can do spot >metering by using the frame selection lever. You can't. At best, you can use >the lever to give yourself a clearer idea of what the lens on the camera is >actually metering, by bringing up the frame-line for the next-longest lens. >For example, if you have a 35mm lens on the camera, flick the lever to bring >up the 50mm frame-line---that box will show you the approximate metering >area of the 35mm lens. > >Chuck Albertson ah, this is what i've always understood that passage to mean: switching to the next smallest frame-line helps you to visualize what area of the field will be covered by the meter. i must admit, however, that i never do this. if the scene i'm metering has a fairly even distribution of light and dark tones, i just go with whatever the internal meter says. if the scene is overly light or dark, i still go with the general reading, then compensate. if it contains big areas of bright and dark tones, i just meter for both by taking a 'half and half' reading: a horizon with a bright sky and a detailed landscape below. i meter off the horizon line, with the brights above and the shadows below. stuff always comes out exposed correctly. guy