Flash Meter March 19th, 2010
I also don't know how reliable the flash meters are. If you bracket 1 stop under, the suggested and one stop over exposed will you usually get an acceptable exposure?
That would pretty much sum up the use for a flash meter. Since it's such a quick burst of light, a regular meter wont work. So you need an incident meter that can hold that number so you can read it. Generally photographers setup the lights into position and take a reading off of each strobe individually. Then you can determine the lighting ratio and whether to move the lights or adjust the power.
Hello deb
Voodoocat gives a good summary of why an "incident" meter is used with strobe lights in the studio
Studio work is lots of fun -- made more so if you can master "lighting ratios"
Here is a primer on the subject:
http://www.thephotoforum.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=489&highlight=
Enjoy!
:)
e_
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