Light meter advice
laurenornot
Registered Users Posts: 167 Major grins
Having just purchased a pristine Yashica Mat 124G, I am wary of its internal light meter and would like to get a standalone.
I've never had one before, so I have no idea where to start. I've checked out B&H and Adorama's used departments for inspiration, but I don't know how to differentiate between them all, other than what condition they're in!
Can anyone help me out with some suggestions, or at least what I should be looking for? Thanks in advance!
...and for eye candy, here's my new plaything
I've never had one before, so I have no idea where to start. I've checked out B&H and Adorama's used departments for inspiration, but I don't know how to differentiate between them all, other than what condition they're in!
Can anyone help me out with some suggestions, or at least what I should be looking for? Thanks in advance!
...and for eye candy, here's my new plaything
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When I recently got a vintage TLR with a sketchy light meter I thought about buying a dedicated Sekonic or something that everyone uses. But I downloaded a Light Meter app for my iPhone, paid $.99 for it and it works perfectly. A friend even compared it against his $300 light meter and it was spot-on.
So I would of course suggest giving that a go with a roll or two and see if you need anything more than that.
Photos that don't suck / 365 / Film & Lomography
Edit: With incident reading...it is taken from the subject..so if it is a white object the incident reading will keep you from blowing out high lights....i...some photog seem to have a hard time shooting non Caucasian people....I have never had a prob when using an incident meter......I do not know what you shoot...but the TLR or any square format camera for that matter is best suited for portrait and wedding work......if it is landscape and such, unless printing square prints, then you should think about possibly getting a 645 format camera...which will also raise the print count from 12 to 15 or a 6x7 camera (pentax 67, print count goes down from 12 - 9... I think), large 35mm shaped camera great resolution, contrast and all including interchangeable lenses......645 has interchangeable lenses also but is more boxed shaped, again I owned and used the Pentax 645 a lot......almost a pocket camera......same film and everything...you may be able to find on ebay or KEH or other camera store selling used gear.....
Good Luck and Happy shooting with a fantastic camera...do you need a leather case for it??
Adding a link to some of my shots - these were not altered after scanning (except for the bw) and I metered with the camera each time. The first 10 pics are from the Mat. Film type is listed in the captions.
http://cherie1h.smugmug.com/Other/Film/6595465_QBGpSD#420166636_Zds9X
Thanks! I'll definitely test out the built-in meter with a roll before I spend any money on a meter, but I'm preparing for it based on what I've read. What's the name of the iPhone app? Sounds great!
Thank you for the advice I mainly shoot portraiture, so I'm really excited. Are you selling a leather case for it? I might be interested!
Beautiful work, thanks for sharing!
http://photo.tutsplus.com/articles/hardware/quick-tip-a-look-at-5-iphone-lightmeter-apps/
Recently, I picked up a sekonic L758 Cine for HDslr filmmaking and flash photography. It works extremely well, very quick. But it is a bit pricey.
http://www.youtube.com/user/NYCFilmmakersGroup
http://www.meetup.com/NYC-Filmmakers-and-Actors-Meetup-Group/
The analog dial also calculates compatible f-stop and shutter-speed combinations at a single glance. EV scale for Hasselblad users. (EV scale also easily compensates for filter factors.)
Null meter reading is both fast and accurate. Both continuous and stored readings are supported.
Uses common 9v battery and the battery lasts a long time with normal use.
1/3rd stop accuracy is typical.
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