Using DSLR as light meter


Go ahead let the owners be the judge ;-)
 

Haha if you say so :D

lol seriously if you think so. So be it :-)

Et tu Brutus lol

I'm not the one who's being rude here. Read back and see who's more of a troll !

Plus I won't bother to explain to people who thinks they know all ;-)

Yes... let them judge.
 

Vincent1551 said:
daredevil123 said:
Dear Vincent1551, You have received an infraction at ClubSNAP Photography Forums. Reason: Major Guideline Violation ------- Trolling ------- This infraction is worth 10 point(s) and may result in restricted access until it expires. Serious infractions will never expire. Original Post: 8761279 ClubSNAP Photography Forums PS: This message is generated automatically, please do not reply.

Haha real funny :D

One more major infraction for you.
 

I regret the unpleasantness. thanks to sifu Catchlights for explaining and to sempai dd123 for help.
 

Yes, you can but you will want to use an ISO 100 film and set your shutter speed at 1/250s and your aperture at f8 and you can use your DSLR as light meter.
 

Yes, you can but you will want to use an ISO 100 film and set your shutter speed at 1/250s and your aperture at f8 and you can use your DSLR as light meter.

No need. Use whatever ISO film you like. The light on your subject and sensitivity of your film dictates the shutter speed/aperture combination. It is not permanently fixed at 1/250 sec & ƒ8.
 

I'm not surprised,do take note that tiny wide angle lenses used in mobile devices take in
more light so does the polaroid camera.Don't just rely on metering but understand the theory
of photographic light meters.In bright situation meter tend to underexpose and vice versa.It's
only an average reading.

Noted with thanks! Trial and error showed me that too..

I'm sure you are aware the film speed of Fuji FP-3000B is ISO 3000 right?

Yeap. Actually ISO 3200.
 

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