privatebydesign said:
But you have added to the captions, why did you feel the need to do that if you were comfortable with the way you presented your piece previously.
No, I only added 'Canon 5D Mark III' to one rollover, an oversight due to the fact that that rollover was copied from another article on read noise where we purposefully left brands/cameras out of the discussion. After someone pointed it out here (in a very rude manner, no less), I agreed it best to clarify right in the caption (since I guess some weren't reading the text around it that clearly indicated the 5D IV's improvements
addressed such issues).
No other captions were changed. I am very comfortable with the way the piece was originally presented, which is pretty much the same way it's presented now.
privatebydesign said:
As for your issues with metering; composition and exposure are the two key aspects of any image. Stand two photographers next to each other and their images look different because of the composition and exposure. Anybody using any camera with selective exposure control should understand how and what a meter is doing and how it will represent a scene in front of them. And lets be honest, all digital cameras will meter practically the same in any situation.
Well, except for ones that won't spot meter off the chosen AF point.
Also, this was kind of my point: that you have to work around the fact that camera meters aren't perfect always for your creative intent, so technologies like EC and latitude
both help you, with the latter particularly helping you when you don't have the time to chimp.
privatebydesign said:
It is your skill as a photographer to interpret that reading and make the adjustments you need to get the image to look how you envision, but you know that.
Yes, agreed. But what you're arguing is, if I may, bit of snobbery: that a 'real photographer' will adjust exposure on the spot, while a (poser?) will try and adjust the exposure after-the-fact. The latter is to be looked down upon, even when the former may not be possible because of the speed of the shooting scenario?
privatebydesign said:
I think the general public would assume that people testing any gear for review, especially on the more popular review sites, would not only fully understand all that but be able to use any one of a number of techniques to correctly expose their subjects in any situation they might run into with any regularity. The logical extension of your argument is the low DR slide film was unusable, yet clearly it wasn't.
The logical extension of your counterargument is that the low DR of slide film was good enough, which I suppose is why most wedding photographers shot negative film that had far more latitude?
I'm sure you see my point: most event photographers shot/shoot neg, landscape shooters that had all the time in the world shot slides (I did, anyway). This is precisely why at DPR I keep stating that, if anything, dynamic range is possibly more important for fast-paced shooting scenarios than landscapes; at least you have the time for bracketing and good technique with the latter.
privatebydesign said:
You do not have to be some godlike speed demon super hero to use EC, you just need to use cameras regularly and be deliberate about what tonal values you actually want. It takes time, familiarity, application and a certain amount of skill to get your exposures where you want them. It seems to me your argument is 'I don't need skill with other cameras so why should I need that with this one, which isn't the camera we are actually talking about which we think might be a bit better anyway.'
I use EC all the time. You've misunderstood me. 'It takes
time... and a certain amount of
skill to get your exposures where you want them' --> exactly. And what I'm saying is this:
... that even some of the best photographers in the world don't have the
skill to
always predict exactly how much EC would be needed without chimping, and some scenarios don't allow
time for chimping (encountered in weddings all the time as a moment is happening). In those scenarios, latitude is beneficial.
Or, times where you actually *want* to dial in negative EC or allow for underexposure to retain highlights. In which case a camera that has more latitude
allows you to do so with less of a noise cost.
Is that so very unreasonable?
-Rishi