MarkBarbieri
Semi-retired
- Joined
- Aug 20, 2006
- Messages
- 6,171
Bad Spot
I took this shot at the Finding Nemo Musical with spot metering. The spot I metered off of is in the dark, so I overexposed the picture. Metering in these shows with bright subjects and dark backgrounds is tough. I think spot metering was a mistake because on any shot where a relatively normal part of the subject wasn't in the metering area, my exposure was off. Evaluative wouldn't work well either. Next time I'll try either center-weighted or partial (like spot only with a bigger spot).
Blurry
I blew this shot in two ways. First, I didn't get both the flags and the mountain in focus. I should have been more careful and used either a higher aperture or focused further back. I suspect that I focused on the flags (wasting the in focus area in from of the subject) rather than somewhere between them.
The second mistake was using a shutter speed of 1/100s. That wasn't fast enough to freeze the train nor was it slow enough to give it a really good motion blur. Instead, it just looks blurry.
Flash
I didn't expect much from this, but I wanted to see what a FotLK shot taken with direct flash would look like. Obviously, it didn't turn out very well. It illuminated the audience on the other side, making them a distraction. It also gave a very flat look to the subject. In the future, I might try dialing down the flash a couple of stops and use it to supplement the light, but I really don't like the look of it as a primary light source.
Backlit
The is a classic case of undexposing a subject because it is backlit. I used evaluative (matrix) metering, which considers the entire frame. The camera picked this exposure, which keeps it from blowing out the cloudy sky in the background. I should have switched to spot metering and metered off of the bird.

I took this shot at the Finding Nemo Musical with spot metering. The spot I metered off of is in the dark, so I overexposed the picture. Metering in these shows with bright subjects and dark backgrounds is tough. I think spot metering was a mistake because on any shot where a relatively normal part of the subject wasn't in the metering area, my exposure was off. Evaluative wouldn't work well either. Next time I'll try either center-weighted or partial (like spot only with a bigger spot).
Blurry

I blew this shot in two ways. First, I didn't get both the flags and the mountain in focus. I should have been more careful and used either a higher aperture or focused further back. I suspect that I focused on the flags (wasting the in focus area in from of the subject) rather than somewhere between them.
The second mistake was using a shutter speed of 1/100s. That wasn't fast enough to freeze the train nor was it slow enough to give it a really good motion blur. Instead, it just looks blurry.
Flash

I didn't expect much from this, but I wanted to see what a FotLK shot taken with direct flash would look like. Obviously, it didn't turn out very well. It illuminated the audience on the other side, making them a distraction. It also gave a very flat look to the subject. In the future, I might try dialing down the flash a couple of stops and use it to supplement the light, but I really don't like the look of it as a primary light source.
Backlit

The is a classic case of undexposing a subject because it is backlit. I used evaluative (matrix) metering, which considers the entire frame. The camera picked this exposure, which keeps it from blowing out the cloudy sky in the background. I should have switched to spot metering and metered off of the bird.