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Photography Q&A
when I shoot single point-what should
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<blockquote data-quote="hark" data-source="post: 660641" data-attributes="member: 13196"><p>I switched all my bodies to center-weighted metering instead of matrix metering. I do a lot of landscape shooting and found I was always having to override the exposure while in matrix metering (usually had to underexpose by -0.7 stop). </p><p></p><p>You can eyeball a scene and tell if it is overly bright or overly dark (such as shooting snow). <em><strong>If it's bright, go brighter. If it's dark, go darker.</strong></em> I don't believe I've ever used spot metering though.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="hark, post: 660641, member: 13196"] I switched all my bodies to center-weighted metering instead of matrix metering. I do a lot of landscape shooting and found I was always having to override the exposure while in matrix metering (usually had to underexpose by -0.7 stop). You can eyeball a scene and tell if it is overly bright or overly dark (such as shooting snow). [I][B]If it's bright, go brighter. If it's dark, go darker.[/B][/I] I don't believe I've ever used spot metering though. [/QUOTE]
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Photography Q&A
when I shoot single point-what should
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