Perfect exposure remains a struggle for many hobbyists when it doesn't need to. A few quick perfect exposure cheats can help you nail your shot like a pro.
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Sunny 16
An oldie but goody, the sunny 16 rule is always accurate when used correctly. On a sunny day, with no interference from shade or clouds, the correct exposure for any scene is a shutter speed of 1 over the ISO at f/16. If your ISO is 100, then the correct shutter speed is 1/100 and aperture is f/16. Using the law of reciprocity, you can vary this exposure to get the same result with different settings. For example, ISO 100, 1/200Â at f/11 is the same as ISO 200 at 1/400 and f/11. With this rule, you always have a perfect exposure starting point on a sunny day. The correct exposure for a light source is constant regardless of where you point the camera.
Hand-held meter
Nothing beats the accuracy of a hand-held incident meter because it gives you the correct midtone exposure for any source of light with the push of a button. It measures the light falling onto the integrating sphere of the meter and not color or tonality of subjects. Hence, when getting a reading for a given light source, a black subject will expose black and a white subject will expose white. It takes a couple of seconds to meter and put the settings into the camera -- literally maybe five --Â but the benefit is there's zero guessing and you can immediately shoot with confidence without having to chimp. To use it correctly, place the meter's sphere in the same light as the subject -- in front of the subject pointing back at the camera if possible.
Spot meter
Using the camera's spot meter to measure a subject of known reflectivity can get you an accurate starting point sometimes more quickly than using a hand-held meter, and usually more quickly than matrix metering an entire scene and guessing as to how the camera will render it. The key is knowing how to compensate if necessary. If you meter a subject known to be 18 percent gray, such as caucasian skin, the reading you see in the camera will be the exact correct exposure. This is why photographers sometimes meter gray cards.
There are other ways to use this: Meter a highlight -- bright white object -- and increase exposure 2 to 2.5 stops. This will ensure you record as much detail as possible without losing highlight detail. This doesn't guarantee shadow detail if the scene is outside the camera's dynamic range. It's also more of a landscape than portrait technique. Make sure the object you're metering fills the focus point and a significant area around it. The longer the lens, the more accurate the spot will be.
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