Metering: Metering is how your camera determines what the
correct shutter speed and aperture should be, depending on
the amount of light that goes into the camera and the sensitivity of the
sensor. Back in the old days of photography, cameras were not equipped with a
light “meter”, which is a sensor that measures the amount and intensity of
light. Photographers had to use hand-held light meters to determine the optimal
exposure. Obviously, because the work was shot on film, they could not preview
or see the results immediately, which is why they religiously relied on those
light meters.
Today, every
DSLR has an integrated light meter that automatically measures the reflected
light and determines the optimal exposure. The most common metering modes in
digital cameras today are:
- ·
Multi Segmented Metering, also known as Matrix Metering for Nikon
and Evaluative Metering for Canon.
- ·
Center-weighted Metering.
- ·
Spot Metering, also known as Partial Metering for Canon.
You can see
the camera meter in action when you shoot in Manual Mode – look
inside the viewfinder and you will see bars going left or right, with a zero in
the middle, as illustrated below.
If you point
your camera at a very bright area, the bars will go to “+” side, indicating
that there is too much light for the current exposure settings. If you point
your camera at a very dark area, the bars will go to the “-” side, indicating
that there is not enough light. You would then play around with your Shutter
speed, Aperture and ISO to get to “0″, which is the optimal exposure, according
to your camera meter.
A camera meter
is not only useful for just the Manual Mode – when you choose another
mode such as Aperture Priority, Shutter Priority or Program
Mode, the camera automatically adjusts the settings based on what it reads from
the meter.
- Multi Segmented Metering: This mode is
the default metering mode on most DSLRs. It works similarly to the above
example by dividing the entire frame into multiple “zones”, which are then all
analyzed on individual basis for light and dark tones. One of the key factors
(in addition to color, distance, subjects, highlights, etc) that affect multi
segmented metering, is where the camera focus point is set to. After reading
information from all individual zones, the metering system looks at where you
focused within the frame and marks it more important than all other zones.
There are many other variables used in the equation, which differ from
manufacturer to manufacturer. Nikon, for example, also compares image data to a
database of thousands of pictures for exposure calculation.
You should use
this mode for most of your photography, since it will generally do a pretty
good job in determining the correct exposure. I leave my camera metering mode
on matrix metering for most of my photography needs, including landscape and
portrait photography.
- Center-weighted Metering:
Using the
whole frame for determining the correct exposure is not always desirable. What
if you are trying to take a headshot of a person with the sun behind? This is
where center-weighted metering comes in handy. Center-weighted Metering
evaluates the light in the middle of the frame and its surroundings and ignores
the corners. Compared to Matrix Metering, Center-weighted Metering does not
look at the focus point you select and only evaluates the middle area of the
image.
Use this mode
when you want the camera to prioritize the middle of the frame, which works
great for close-up portraits and relatively large subjects that are in the
middle of the frame. For example, if you were taking a headshot of a person
with the sun behind him/her, then this mode would expose the face of the person
correctly, even though everything else would probably get heavily overexposed.
- Spot Metering: Spot Metering
only evaluates the light around your focus point and ignores everything else.
It evaluates a single zone/cell and calculates exposure based on that single
area, nothing else. I personally use this mode a lot for my bird photography,
because the birds mostly occupy a small area of the frame and I need to make
sure that I expose them properly, whether the background is bright or dark.
Because the light is evaluated where I place my focus point, I could get an
accurate exposure on the bird even when the bird is in the corner of the frame.
Also, if you were taking a picture of a person with the sun behind but they
occupied a small part of the frame, it is best to use the spot metering mode
instead. When your subjects do not take much of the space, using Matrix or
Center-weighted metering modes would most likely result in a silhouette, if the
subject was back-lit. Spot metering works great for back-lit subjects like
that.
Another good
example of using spot metering is when photographing the Moon. Because the
moon would take up a small portion of the frame and the sky is completely dark
around it, it is best to use Spot metering – that way, we are only looking at
the light level coming from the moon and nothing else.
Some DSLRs
like the Canon 1D/1Ds are capable of multi-spot metering, which basically
allows choosing multiple spots to measure light and come up with an average
value for a good exposure.
How to change camera metering mode: Unfortunately,
this varies not only from manufacturer to manufacturer, but also from model to
model. On Beginner level DSLRs, it is done through the menu setting, while on advanced
bodies, like Alpha 700, there is a dedicated button to the right side of the viewfinder.
Metering modes on Beginner level DSLRs
Metering modes on Professional DSLRs
Problems with Metering: Camera meters work great when the scene
is lit evenly. However, it gets problematic and challenging for light meters to
determine the exposure, when there are objects with different light levels and
intensities. For example, if you are taking a picture of the blue sky with no
clouds or sun in the frame, the image will be correctly exposed, because there
is just one light level to deal with. The job gets a little harder if you add a
few clouds into the image – the meter now needs to evaluate the brightness of
the clouds versus the brightness of the sky and try to determine the optimal
exposure. As a result, the camera meter might brighten up the sky a little bit
in order to properly expose the white clouds – otherwise, the clouds would look
too white or “overexposed”.
What would
happen if you added a big mountain into the scene? Now the camera meter would
see that there is a large object that is much darker (relative to the clouds
and the sky), and it would try to come up with something in the middle, so that
the mountain is properly exposed as well. By default, the camera meter looks at
the light levels in the entire frame and tries to come up with an
exposure that balances the bright and the dark areas of the image.
- · Multi Segmented Metering, also known as Matrix Metering for Nikon and Evaluative Metering for Canon.
- · Center-weighted Metering.
- · Spot Metering, also known as Partial Metering for Canon.
- Multi Segmented Metering: This mode is the default metering mode on most DSLRs. It works similarly to the above example by dividing the entire frame into multiple “zones”, which are then all analyzed on individual basis for light and dark tones. One of the key factors (in addition to color, distance, subjects, highlights, etc) that affect multi segmented metering, is where the camera focus point is set to. After reading information from all individual zones, the metering system looks at where you focused within the frame and marks it more important than all other zones. There are many other variables used in the equation, which differ from manufacturer to manufacturer. Nikon, for example, also compares image data to a database of thousands of pictures for exposure calculation.
- Center-weighted Metering: Using the whole frame for determining the correct exposure is not always desirable. What if you are trying to take a headshot of a person with the sun behind? This is where center-weighted metering comes in handy. Center-weighted Metering evaluates the light in the middle of the frame and its surroundings and ignores the corners. Compared to Matrix Metering, Center-weighted Metering does not look at the focus point you select and only evaluates the middle area of the image.
- Spot Metering: Spot Metering only evaluates the light around your focus point and ignores everything else. It evaluates a single zone/cell and calculates exposure based on that single area, nothing else. I personally use this mode a lot for my bird photography, because the birds mostly occupy a small area of the frame and I need to make sure that I expose them properly, whether the background is bright or dark. Because the light is evaluated where I place my focus point, I could get an accurate exposure on the bird even when the bird is in the corner of the frame. Also, if you were taking a picture of a person with the sun behind but they occupied a small part of the frame, it is best to use the spot metering mode instead. When your subjects do not take much of the space, using Matrix or Center-weighted metering modes would most likely result in a silhouette, if the subject was back-lit. Spot metering works great for back-lit subjects like that.
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