Light and Meter
Here you can learn how to use a light meter, what the
difference is between incident and reflected light, how to light a white
background and much, much more. We are dedicated to helping you learn how
to control light.
Getting a good exposure generally depends on understanding light
and using a meter to measure the light in a scene.

Reflected light and incident light meters
Metering reflected light is exactly what it sounds like - you’re
measuring the light bouncing off of the subject. Incident light is measuring
the hitting the subject (before it bounces back to the camera.)
A meter helps to determine both the aperture and shutter speed.
In some cases, the meter gives you a digital read out of the appropriate
aperture at a given shutter speed. Some meters - especially older ones - uses a
needle which you match to either a line or a second needle. Its a good idea to
either get the sales person who sells you the camera or hand held meter to show
you how to get the most out of it or can read the manual that comes with the
meter or camera.
A camera’s internal meter always measures reflected light. In
most cameras, this works very well for almost all the scenes most of us shoot.
The problem comes when shooting a dark on dark subject or light on light
subject. This is covered in other lessons, but the essential idea is that the
meter thinks the whole world is 18 per cent grey. So, if you’re shooting a
black cat on a dark chair, the meter will think it should be a lot lighter than
that and will overexpose the image. Conversely, if you’re shooting snow on an
overcast day, the meter will try to darken it to grey and it will underexpose
the subject - even more than the usual grey of the day. Or an egg on a white
table will come out muddy grays.
Understanding that, you can usually change the exposure to be
more realistic.
Or, you can get a handheld meter which measures the light
hitting the subject (incident light) and it doesn’t matter if the subject is
white, grey, black, red or any other color.
On most new style hand held meters, there is a white dome
covering the sensor which is used for measuring incident light.
As a rule, the best way to measure incident light is to stand
beside the subject and point the white dome towards the camera. This gives a
good overall exposure. You can also point the meter towards the light (or
brightest light if there’s multiple light sources) to absolutely keep from over
exposing the scene. This is especially good when doing a portrait. However, if
the brightest light is coming from overhead and you’re shooting a portrait,
point the meter at the camera or you’ll get deep dark shadows in the eye
sockets which will make your subjects look like they have raccoon eyes.
If the subject is too far away to easily stand beside, you can
find a spot with similar light to that hitting the subject, and measure the
light the same way.
Spot meter
Another type of meter is the “spot meter” which can be hand held
or built into many higher end cameras and is useful for more distant scenes you
can’t just walk up to and use an incident meter. This measures reflected light,
but only in a very small area - typically 1 to 3 degrees which is a small spot
in an overall scene. The handheld meters tend to be the tighter 1 degree
measurement. With a spot meter, you can determine the brightest point in a
distant scene, as well as the darkest. Then, you can average the exposure
between the two and hope to keep the highlights and shadows, or you can decide
one is more important than the other. Those are choices you have to make
yourself.
Flash meter
Many modern handheld meters include the ability to measure the
light put out by a flash system - whether small portable flashes or big studio
style flashes. Most photographers use light meters using incident light.
Because flashes are very short exposure, the important part is the aperture. In
most situations, especially using studio flashes, any other light - such as
lamps, etc. - will be so under exposed you won’t see the light in the picture.
You can, however, also measure any ambient light and adjust the
shutter speed to make any background light the same exposure as the flash or
slightly under.

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