I prefer to look at it differently. Learn how your camera works. Use that knowledge to make the best pictures you can given the circumstances and the intended usage.
That's wise advice and we should all learn out tools.
We are both good photographers and both strive to "make the best pictures you can" (to quote you) and I agree. We would agree on lighting, composition and those other things that add up to make a good image.
However, where we diverge is what 'make the best picture you can" means.
You define making the best pictures you can as slowing down and striving the achieve the best technical file that the tech in your hands can deliver.
Whereas I define making the best pictures I can as nailing a decisive moment by setting my cameras up to be instantly ready for anything, at the expense of the very best IQ file technically.
This should be no surprise, as we photograph different things with different priorities.
It's not a question of not understanding anything, to me it's ALWAYS about relating that back real world scenarios.
It think that's entirely situational. If I were faced with the kinds of assignments that you are, I might do pretty much the same as you do (although I think I'd probably use lower ISOs in dim light).
If you were doing the kind of work I do, you might work more like me.
The discussion about getting the best raw exposure is not about getting the best picture. This thread is about getting the best technical quality.
Knowing how to get the best image technical IQ does not guarantee a good final result.
Ansel Adams said famously: There's nothing worse than a sharp image of a fuzzy concept. He was also famous for pursuing technical excellence with vigor.
It is a pity when talent is wasted because of a lack of technical knowledge.
This passive-aggressive stuff of labeling me as stupid without actually saying it is getting a bit tiresome. You keep hinting I'm missing something but never say what. It's somewhat frustrating. For example "You seem to think of it as any technique that gives a 'good exposure'" --- which is implying that it is nothing of the kind and I'm daft to think so. I'm putting up with it because I want to make sure I'm really not missing something.
And again guessing what you think I mean and ignoring what I tell you I mean. There is no reason why you should persist in trying to get me to admit I have the wrong conception of what ETTR is. It's a meaningless quest. My conception may or may not be correct, but it is sufficient for the task at hand. We want to use exposure settings that provide us with the maximum data and least noise in our files. That's my definition of "good exposure" - perfectly simple, perfectly unambiguous and perfectly straight forward:
Shoot raw
Base ISO
Give the sensor as much light as possible without saturating it.
To give the sensor that much light choose aperture and shutter that maxes out the histogram to the right without creating a peak and blowing highlights.
The method used to achieve the desired exposure #4 above is often called ETTR. That's a good term for what we are doing. And there is no harm in calling the goal of said exposure ETTR either. Anybody knows what is meant. One does not need to speak in precise terms to be understood. Context is sufficient to cover minor inaccuracies.
Now do you disagree with any of 1 - 4? If you do, let's talk about what you disagree with and skip all this unhelpful "lacking understanding", "making category errors" judgemental ad hom stuff.
EDIT: And please don't let this become the Danno vs Donald MkII show....
By the way, with Sony a1x, a7x cameras, you can use auto-ISO in A mode and control headroom with your thumb on the EC wheel. Crank in negative EC as the light level drops.
At last we have found a form of words to put across the point that we basically agree. I agree with everything you say technically. If I were working like you I'd adopt these best practices. And you largely agree with my approach for my genres. Although you'd tackle my genres slightly differently. Which is of course fine!
All I've ever wanted to do is to join the dots of best practice vs genre specific needs.
I don't want novices and the less experienced to end of confused and daunted, or to feel that they cannot be successful without putting the science first and foremost.
Sometimes the context may be clear to you but not to others. That is why, especially online, the precision of expression and thoughts is essential. It requires a bit more work but is an excellent practice to deepen understanding of the issue.
Totally agreed. And Ansel Adams was correct. "There's nothing worse than a sharp image of a fuzzy concept". Equally, you could say "there's nothing worse than a technically perfect perfect raw file that missed the decisive moment"
All I've tried to do with this and similar threads is bring it all back to nailing an actual shot. I don't disagree with the science:)
You seem to be testing something here. I'm afraid I'm going to disappoint you, I've never been in a studio, well equipped or otherwise, I don't know exactly what repro work means or what is involved. My best guess is your question has something to do with being able to control the level of the ambient light?
I never test people.
Repro - is making reproductions (of, say, paintings).
I use stacking to effectively lower ISO to something like 6; I use magenta filters on the flashes to get better exposure of red and blue channels (but I do it for outdoors too when needed, putting a filter in front of the lens or into the filter compartment), I can use multi-spectral images, and in certain cases - if a document is fragile, and flashes are out of question - monochrome camera with 5 to 9 colour filters.
Kind of like the dismissing of someone else's honestly held views as pedantry.
I say exactly what you're missing - that a goal and a means of achieving that goal are different things.
No, it's just saying what you seem to think. I can't say for certain what you think because I'm not telepathic. So I just have to say how it seems to me, There's no insinuation that you're daft to think so.
That's not what's happening at all. I'm trying my best to interpret what you're saying and telling you how I interpret it. If that's not a correct interpretation of what you meant, then we have a communication issue, which is exactly what I've been talking about. If I get it wrong, just clarify what you meant.
I'm not trying to get you to admit that you have the wrong conception of what ETTR is. I'm just saying that we have different conceptions, and that has caused a miscommunication. Then I tried to understand what your interpretation is, but you didn't like that either.
OK, but that's wasn't 'ETTR as I was interpreting it, and I think as many would interpret it. But if that's your definition of good exposure, I think you're missing some important things. A good exposure needs to be compatible with your pictorial and operational constraints. If the exposure you choose doesn't deliver that, you can't really call it a 'good exposure' - which I think was the point that I made several posts back.
The method misses completely meeting pictorial and operational constraints. Keeping in base ISO is not always a good idea, You've now introdused the histogram, which is the core of what I understand as the ETTR method, which you seemed to be denying earlier. The histogram is often misleading for raw exposure, and there are other, often simpler ways of achieving this goal (for instance, spot metering off the highlights with appropriate offset or calibration of the meter).
If you include the use of the histogram, yes. You shouldn't ever assume that 'anyone' knows what you mean, because they really don't, unless your communication skills are superb. Most of the communication errors here have been cause by failure to use precise terms. The context in no way covers inaccuracies and neither are they minor. Your interlocutor is not telepathic, so you need to say what you mean clearly, and if asked for clarification, give it.
Nothing I have said has been ad hominem. It's all been about what you say, not who you are. Things like 'category errors' are explaining why I disagree with what you say. What you appeared to be saying included a category error, therefore I cannot agree with it. That's how discussion works.
And I'm not responding to your added rather offensive request.