I think a lot of experienced photographers should be able to get close and have a range of settings that work for sunny, cloudy, indoor low light, indoor bright light etc,. but to get it absolutely spot on every time is something else.
Yeah I'd have a general idea but I think Phil said he can do it within half a stop or something, wasn't it Phil?
Not trying to make you look stupid. As before its a great talent you should be proud to showcase. 9 shots out of 10 bang on is very impressive. No hidden agendas there.
How is taking a test shot and adjusting any different to using a light meter and making your decision?
I don't think trying to define what manual means is really helping. If I use aperture priority but decide to override the camera and use exp comp then I am at that point taking manual control of the exposure.
I think there's a difference between getting it pretty close and getting it spot on 9 times out of 10 though. Credit where it is due David.
joescrivens said:No I don't think that's true. All you are saying is that you want it a bit brighter or a bit darker than what the camera is calculating, you are still relying on the camera to make the initial decision.
Don't know, never tried...you could post if you like...
Here you go phil
http://www.talkphotography.co.uk/forums/showthread.php?t=455088
Nothing serious. Just a bit of fun see how you go.
And no appreciation of what your meter is doing, based on this answer?
So you might as well be on one of the semi auto modes, for exactly the same amount of control and half the work.
Or even - take control of your metering - use the semi auto modes and be in full control of what you're shooting![]()