• DeletedRemoved user
    2 years ago

    Danno, I hope the above was intended for the benefit of Beginners. If not, telling me how metering works is quite insulting

    Equally insulting and will you PLEASE stop telling us your definition of 'exposure' ... grump.

  • DanHasLeftForumhelp_outline
    4254 posts
    2 years ago

    Yes, the 18% number is the "traditional" number that was bandied around and I saw when I first got into photography ~17 years ago.

    Over the last year or so on dpreview I saw people use something like 12% or 15% from memory in their posts. Don't hold me to those numbers.

    What would you suggest is a more appropriate percentage to quote if/when in the future the need for similar posts come up in discussions?

  • IliahBorgpanorama_fish_eye
    976 posts
    2 years ago

    That's why I limit ISO when using M + ISO Auto.

  • JimKassonpanorama_fish_eye
    1738 posts
    2 years ago

    About 12.5%, which is three stops down from full scale. But the key thing is that it can vary with camera model number (and, I suppose, with camera serial number, but that is going to be a smaller effect).

  • IliahBorgpanorama_fish_eye
    976 posts
    2 years ago

    That's one of the very few cameras that are calibrated in raw close to the standard.

  • DonaldBpanorama_fish_eye
    2365 posts
    2 years ago

    seriously Jim, i think you need to rework those tests.

    xz1 studio.jpg

    olympus xz1.JPG

    xz1 studio.jpg

    JPG, 692.2 KB, uploaded by DonaldB 2 years ago.

    olympus xz1.JPG

    JPG, 7.9 MB, uploaded by DonaldB 2 years ago.

  • SrMipanorama_fish_eye
    457 posts
    2 years ago

    Yes, at high ISOs histograms can be helpful but do not need to be accurate.

  • DanHasLeftForumhelp_outline
    4254 posts
    2 years ago

    It was certainly not meant as an insult.

    It was partly also related to your earlier comment:

    "there is very little or no penalty when "underexposing" by keeping the ISO a few stops lower than the maximum possible while keeping the exposure unchanged."

    which made no sense to me because I cannot see how you can underexpose while keeping the exposure unchanged.

    I make no apologies at all for including the definition of "exposure" I use in my posts in the interests of transparency and clarity.

    Too many beginners, and even some who should know better, confuse image lightness and exposure and incorrectly use them interchangeably as if they meant the same thing when they do not. Very often when I question them to clarify what they mean by "exposure" so that their posts will actually make sense, they either run away or come up with all sorts of wishy-washy descriptions because they do not really know what exposure actually is.

    At least with my posts people will know exactly what I mean by "exposure" and "optimal exposure" so there is no misunderstanding. Now, whether they agree with me or not is a totally different matter 🙂

  • IliahBorgpanorama_fish_eye
    976 posts
    2 years ago

    Jim is correct.

  • DonaldBpanorama_fish_eye
    2365 posts
    2 years ago

    Funny that you should say that. because the exposure settings on that camera were always different than any other camera i owned. now i will compare it to my a74.

  • SrMipanorama_fish_eye
    457 posts
    2 years ago

    Ideally we want to know where is the clipping as some clipping is perfectly fine.

  • DanHasLeftForumhelp_outline
    4254 posts
    2 years ago

    Ok, thank you for that 🙂

    So in the future if I posted something like "....contemporary camera meters are calibrated to output ~12.5% grey image lightness....", would you be comfortable with that?

  • SrMipanorama_fish_eye
    457 posts
    2 years ago

    Because your definition of "underexpose" is different from the most common one (making image darker).

  • DanHasLeftForumhelp_outline
    4254 posts
    2 years ago

    In a beginners environment imo it is even more important to use the correct terms to describe things. Using different meanings for a word depending on the context can only lead to confusion and misconceptions for beginners.

  • JimKassonpanorama_fish_eye
    1738 posts
    2 years ago

    Sounds more cut and dried than it is. Maybe Iliah could give you a range.

  • SrMipanorama_fish_eye
    457 posts
    2 years ago

    I do not see how that helps in general situations. After setting you exposure manually and the metering system sets ISO below the limit, the metering system may have selected an ISO value that will cause clipping. Maybe always running with -2EC (applied on ISO only) could prevent most clipping, but setting max ISO can't.

  • DanHasLeftForumhelp_outline
    4254 posts
    2 years ago

    Hopefully he can.

    As a "Plan B" would you be comfortable with "....contemporary camera meters are calibrated to output a firmware set image lightness...."?

  • SrMipanorama_fish_eye
    457 posts
    2 years ago

    Maybe we should avoid using the term under- or overexposure and instead use darkening/brightening.