Learn more: http://www.mac-on-campus.com/Shop/Products/Metering-Devices/Sekonic/Exposure-Meters/L-308S-Flashmate.aspx For landscape photographers, capturing …
Video Rating: 5 / 5
Learn more: http://www.mac-on-campus.com/Shop/Products/Metering-Devices/Sekonic/Exposure-Meters/L-308S-Flashmate.aspx For landscape photographers, capturing …
Video Rating: 5 / 5
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So Im confursed. @ 5.52 you took a meter reading and got 1/250 and declared
the shadows to dark. Then you took out the camera and spot metered the
highlights, opened up two stops to ETTR and prosto !… Question if the
camera is giving you the results you need then why do we need the Sekonic
Meter ?
A comment on the aperture used for the panoramic. Just because the bridge
is so far away, doesn’t mean you focus on it. You want everything in focus,
so you look for the hyperfocal distance, and set your focus there. At 17 mm
(on APS-C) you can easily focus on 3-5 meters away, and you get your whole
thing in focus from f/5.6-f/8, which gives you a sharper image than f/16,
which is really small for APS-C with 18 megapixels (like the Canon EOS 7D),
so you will lose some detail due to diffraction.
Thanks for your video. I am a newbie. Wanted to know after metering through
the light meter, what is the metering option you put the camera on :
matrix, centre weighted or spot to take the actual shot
Another rule, closely related to the rule of thirds, is the golden ratio.
It can look like the rule of thirds at a short glance of the lines, but
they’re not spaced at the same ratio, but at 1.618. It’s a big and
interesting subject, and I suggest reading about it.
Love the Videos you putting on youtube ~ So helpful for dummies like me ~
Thanks for your time and effort ~