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View Poll Results: How often do you use a meter?
All/most of the time 162 44.38%
more than half of the time 68 18.63%
half of the time 35 9.59%
less than half of the time 47 12.88%
almost never 53 14.52%
Voters: 365. You may not vote on this poll

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Old 01-01-2012   #51
bowieknife
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Whenever I shoot with an old meterless camera, I have a handheld meter ready. Something like the compact Gossen Sixtino, easily fits any pocket.
Most often I just take an incident light measure, and shoot with the choosen shutter/aperture combination as long as the light remains about the same.
No need outside to measure each subject individually, except when suddenly a cloud covers the sun etc, then of course I take a fresh reading.
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Old 01-01-2012   #52
zerobuttons
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Chriscrawfordphoto View Post
Its pretty overpriced for what it is: a 50 year old design with very poor low-light sensitivity. For the same price, you can get a good modern digital meter that reads in much lower light, can read flash if needed, and is more accurate.
One of the modern Sekonic models that have built-in spotmeters as well as incident light metering are very good, and available for good prices used.
Since I have exactly the same thoughts as Seakayaker1, I have acquired a Sekonic L-398A Studio Deluxe III. I agree with Chris that itīs price tag may not be justified. On the other hand, people have owned these (previous versions) for decades and still use them, and the current version comes with a photo cell that ought to last even longer than the Selenium cell in the previous versions.
I chose to start out with the L-398A since I have not "grown up" with external light metering and wanted to learn things from scratch - and I like the fact that it doesnīt need a battery.

And to answer the OPīs question: always - so far with the cameraīs built-in meter.
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Old 01-07-2012   #53
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Pretty often with the MP and M7. Never or almost never with the M2. I'm comfortable with the Sunny 16 rule. I look at the in-camera meter and frame lines as guides, never relying on them too much. Handheld meters aren't all that helpful for me as I tend to shoot outdoors and like to maintain a pretty quick pace.
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Old 01-07-2012   #54
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I use a light meter every time I use film instead of digital. I get the best results that way.
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Old 01-24-2012   #55
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It depends. Almost always use the built-in meter in digital cameras, often use it in film cameras. With a meterless film camera I almost always just wing it - except for large format cameras, where I almost always use a meter.

It's important to add that I use only negative film. If I were shooting slide film I'd always be using a meter.
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Old 01-24-2012   #56
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All the cameras that I use, do not have built in light meters. I use a handheld for less then half the shots that I take. I meter at the beginning of the shoot and when the sun changes I meter again. I normally meter a couple times during a shoot. Im good at guestimating exposure.
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Old 01-24-2012   #57
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Chriscrawfordphoto View Post
I ALWAYS use a meter. Why bother guessing? I need my photos to come out perfectly, and guessing doesn't do that. Sometimes, it does, but that's luck, not consistency.
OTOH, being able to set exposure without a meter is very possible and in that case it is certainly not "guessing". I have a system that I've been using for several years that requires no meter and it works, even with slides. I rarely misjudge and blow an exposure in any light condition. Don't get me wrong, it took a whole lot of practice to get it down, just saying it's possible.
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Old 01-24-2012   #58
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Quote:
Originally Posted by andredossantos View Post
OTOH, being able to set exposure without a meter is very possible and in that case it is certainly not "guessing". I have a system that I've been using for several years that requires no meter and it works, even with slides. I rarely misjudge and blow an exposure in any light condition. Don't get me wrong, it took a whole lot of practice to get it down, just saying it's possible.
Whats the system?
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Old 01-25-2012   #59
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It's something I came up with myself. Im not even sure how to verbalized it and putting it in a post would take a long time.

Basically, I started with sunny 16 and came up with a way to extend it to any light condition.
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Old 01-26-2012   #60
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All my Cameras Have built-in meters which are very reliable . So I don't have any worries!
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Old 02-23-2012   #61
mathiasprinz
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jsrockit View Post
I always use a meter unless I don't have time to... then I guess.
Thats my approach.
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Old 02-26-2012   #62
umcelinho
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why no "never" answer?
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Old 05-17-2012   #63
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Quote:
Originally Posted by seakayaker1 View Post
I use the meter in the M9, M6TTL, and MP, so it would be all/most of the time.

I am picking up a Rolliflex and do plan on purchasing a light meter. Was thinking about a Sekonic L-398A Studio Deluxe III, any thoughts?
I love my Studio Deluxe - paired with my M2 I am totally battery free - quite liberating when travelling to remote areas. (I have been caught out a few times with unavailability of batteries or spares that are dead when using a metered camera)

As regards low light - yes have to agree with Chris, it's not so good. I tend to increase the exposure by a stop or two indoors when it's very dark, depending upon the light, this usually works out OK.

When I had my IIIf a few years back I used to use sunny 16 all the time with fairly good results, however I now feel more comfortable using a hand held meter to check the exposure every now and then, or for difficult lighting conditions.
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Old 05-18-2012   #64
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Maybe only once or twice a shoot but when I need it, I need it...

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Old 05-18-2012   #65
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About half the time.

When shooting with my M6 outdoor I mostly use sunny 16, and when indoors I do one or two readings and shoot all frames accordingly, compensating if I feel it requires.
I use an external light-meter.

On digital, this is a different story, since the metering is there all the time.
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Old 05-18-2012   #66
Erik van Straten
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I like to work without a meter. To think about the exposure gives me a kind of concentration on the picture.

Erik.
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Old 05-21-2012   #67
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I use the meter in my camera to give me an idea of exposure but never trust the thing.

I use a handheld meter whenever I use flash.
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Old 05-22-2012   #68
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I wished I were more hardcore, but I'm also insecure. So out there with my M4-P I usually use my meter to check my guestimates...
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Old 05-22-2012   #69
Blanc
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Well I'm mostly using my eyes and brain.
I use a meter for inside shots with continuous light or flashes, or when I really need some precise info (nightshots, churches...)
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Old 05-23-2012   #70
loquax ludens
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Generally, I meter all the time, but not necessarily for each and every shot. If I'm shooting under unvarying lighting conditions, I meter then shoot until conditions change. If I'm shooting large format or portraits in any format, I'll meter every shot just because the results need to be spot on.
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Old 06-01-2012   #71
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I usually meter - why waste precious film and/or ruin a good picture? to be honest, i don't trust my guesstimates. Maybe if I stayed with one film only, i could learn to know it well enough, but I like to switch between various films/ISOs, and/or use filters.

Depending on the camera, I use the inbuilt meter or my handheld. I love old, mechanical cameras, many of which don't have a meter. Then I use either my Weimarlux Nova (old, simple, reliable and without battery) or my sekonic L 758 (reflective, incident and spot). Sometimes, I still manage to screw it up, though
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Old 06-22-2012   #72
venchka
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I shoot with an M5. 'Nuff said.
When I'm not shooting with the M5, I use a Gossen Luna-Pro sbc. 'Nuff said.
Poor exposures are always operator error. In my case.

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Old 06-22-2012   #73
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If you mean a hand-held light meter then about 90%, if you include build-in light meters then 100%. Why guess if you can measure 100% accurate? And those that say "sunny 16" I'd like to see them shoot slides without bracketing.
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Old 06-22-2012   #74
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Spanik View Post
those that say "sunny 16" I'd like to see them shoot slides without bracketing.

My father did it for decades, shooting Kodachrome in a IIIf/Summitar. His GE meter died before I was born, and he never fixed or replaced. Sometimes a little overexposed, sometimes a little underexposed (especially late evening light), but he mostly nailed 'em.

I use a hand-held incident meter nearly all the time, reflective mode when called for, and usually in-camera meter for SLR tele work.
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Old 06-30-2012   #75
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When I use the Nikon S2 about half the time, just to double check some tricky light
levels.

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