EdinburghGary
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Guys,
I have a budget of £500 for a light meter, and I am looking for the best option for landscapes. It needs to be perfect for high contrast scenes, as well as the more subdued early and late golden hour lanndscapes. I want a meter that gets absolutely spot on readings to enable me to ensure I am shooting my film effectively.
This model appears to get LOTS of good reviews:
http://www.calumetphoto.co.uk/item/360-220V/
Is it overkill though? I will not spend £500 if I can get exactly what I need for half the price. However, if the more expensive models allow me to work quicker, and if they come with features which make my life easier, I will pay up.
The trouble is, I really don't understand exactly what type of metering is best. I hear some people say SPOT, and then others say instead of measuring reflective light, that I should use an incident meter.
What I like about the meter I have linked to, you can take several readings, and average them out into one final reading.
Any help appreciated.
Gary.
I have a budget of £500 for a light meter, and I am looking for the best option for landscapes. It needs to be perfect for high contrast scenes, as well as the more subdued early and late golden hour lanndscapes. I want a meter that gets absolutely spot on readings to enable me to ensure I am shooting my film effectively.
This model appears to get LOTS of good reviews:
http://www.calumetphoto.co.uk/item/360-220V/
Is it overkill though? I will not spend £500 if I can get exactly what I need for half the price. However, if the more expensive models allow me to work quicker, and if they come with features which make my life easier, I will pay up.
The trouble is, I really don't understand exactly what type of metering is best. I hear some people say SPOT, and then others say instead of measuring reflective light, that I should use an incident meter.
What I like about the meter I have linked to, you can take several readings, and average them out into one final reading.
Any help appreciated.
Gary.

