My first camera with metering had a spot meter only, and I soon learned the 
zone system of metering, relying primarily on using skin tone as the spot for 
metering. It usually left me with enough latitude that I could dodge and burn 
in the darkroom and have a usable print. 

Before that, I used incident light metering with a selenium meter. It also gave 
me film with enough latitude to salvage detail in overexposed areas.

Jeffery

On Nov 21, 2010, at 8:52 PM, paul stenquist wrote:

> Yes, a spot meter is a good tool, but it's only valuable if you can relate 
> the spot you're metering to 18% gray and then compensate accordingly. With 
> the K7 and K5, matrix metering is accurate enough that spot metering is 
> rarely needed. However, I do sometimes use it when shooting something like a 
> neutral colored bird against a white sky background. 
> Paul
> 
> 
> On Nov 21, 2010, at 9:41 PM, Nick David Wright wrote:
> 
>> Jeffery, you're missing the point of the spot meter. IMHO spot meter
>> was never intended to be used in auto mode (at least not without
>> exposure lock and exposure compensation).
>> 
>> The spot meter is there specifically so you can /know/ your highlights
>> will not be blown. See this blog post:
>> http://theonlinephotographer.typepad.com/the_online_photographer/2009/05/do-not-fear-the-sun.html
>> 
>> ~nick
>> 
>> On Sun, Nov 21, 2010 at 8:10 PM, Jeffery Smith <[email protected]> 
>> wrote:
>>> I was never one to bracket when shooting film, and most of my wasted images 
>>> were due to dull subject matter and poor choice of subject/angle/telephone 
>>> pole projecting from the subject's head, not exposure. My biggest hurdle 
>>> with digital is what seems to be a lack of exposure latitude that I can 
>>> only attribute to the automation of the camera making some bad choices. 
>>> That said, spray and pray is becoming more of a norm for me. After all, 
>>> when my high capacity memory card keeps telling me that I have 999 
>>> exposures left, then what the hell. But I wish that this were not the case. 
>>> If the digital camera would give me a sweet spot ISO from which I had some 
>>> confidence that exposure over the entire frame could be salvaged no matter 
>>> what the camera chose for me, I could spend a lot more time composing and 
>>> moving around, thinking more about the subject.
>>> 
>>> For now, I have decided never to use spot metering on a dSLR. The area 
>>> being spot measured looks great, but that doesn't mean I can salvage the 
>>> blown highlights.
>>> 
>>> Jeffery
>>> 
>>> 
>>> On Nov 21, 2010, at 7:33 PM, Walter Gilbert wrote:
>>> 
>>>> Hi all,
>>>> 
>>>> For the past couple of days, I seem to keep encountering references to 
>>>> "stochastic" photography -- or "spray and pray" if you will, and it's 
>>>> piqued my interest.  It's not that I'm considering actively pursuing the 
>>>> practice so much as I wonder how much my current style (method?) could 
>>>> actually be considered stochastic.  Having never worked in the vicinity of 
>>>> another photographer before, my days out shooting with Ted Beilby were, as 
>>>> I said, educational.  We took nearly diametrically opposed approaches.
>>>> 
>>>> Clearly, Ted came out with better quality shots than I did.  He was much 
>>>> more methodical and exacting and produce much more highly textured images 
>>>> than I did.  At the same time, I came out with some images that, while not 
>>>> as polished as Ted's, did have some redeeming value -- at least I thought 
>>>> they did.  I was so arrested by the sheer amount of potential subject 
>>>> matter that I felt I had to get as many different shots as I could in 
>>>> order to get a reasonable account of my experience, so I shot hand-held, 
>>>> almost exclusively.  Knowing that I'd have at least several  hundred shots 
>>>> to go through at the end of my trip (also, due to a relative lack of PC 
>>>> processing power and memory), I stuck to shooting single exposures in jpeg.
>>>> 
>>>> Some subjects, I chose to take three or four different shots from 
>>>> different perspectives and focal depths, while others I shot once or twice 
>>>> and moved on.  And, that's typically the way I do things.  A large part of 
>>>> the reason for that is that I simply don't trust what the camera shows me 
>>>> on its display to be an accurate depiction of what I'm going to see when I 
>>>> load it onto the computer.  The same goes for my perception of any given 
>>>> scene at the time.  I come away with rough approximation in my mind, and 
>>>> when I get home, I'm usually "fairly"close, but never seemingly dead-on in 
>>>> my expectations.
>>>> 
>>>> And, of course, a good bit of what I do shoot simply defies staging in any 
>>>> practical sense.  I'm not going to be able to tell a butterfly how to hold 
>>>> its wings, or a bird where to position itself within my frame.  So, I have 
>>>> to make snap judgments and several attempts.  To the extent that I'm able 
>>>> to dictate composition, I do make a fairly diligent attempt at it.  But, 
>>>> at the same time, I don't try to control every minute detail -- 
>>>> essentially because the vast majority of the subjects I shoot are in an 
>>>> environment that simply defies control.
>>>> 
>>>> So, I was just curious as to the thoughts of the folks on the list as to 
>>>> how much my approach would be considered "spray and pray" by more seasoned 
>>>> photographers, and how much it would benefit if it were less so.
>>>> 
>>>> Thanks for any input anyone has to offer.
>>>> 
>>>> -- Walt
>>>> 
>>>> http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/waltergilbert
>>>> http://waltgilbert.posterous.com/ <http://polipix.posterous.com/>
>>>> Contact Me Facebook <http://www.facebook.com/walt.gilbert>Flickr 
>>>> <http://www.flickr.com/photos/walt_gilbert/>Twitter 
>>>> <http://twitter.com/walt_gilbert>
>>>> 
>>>> --- @ WiseStamp Signature 
>>>> <http://my.wisestamp.com/link?u=ypgdb385pypw7fhb&site=www.wisestamp.com/email-install>.
>>>>  Get it now 
>>>> <http://my.wisestamp.com/link?u=ypgdb385pypw7fhb&site=www.wisestamp.com/email-install>
>>>> 
>>>> 
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>> 
>> -- 
>> ~Nick David Wright
>> http://www.nickdavidwright.net/
>> 
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