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View Full Version : Loving my L-358!!


markhyo
9th of February 2008 (Sat), 18:54
I shot these this past week with a few Vivitars and a 430ex. The L-358 had the exposure perfect on every shot. I love this thing! Why did I go so long without!!

http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2318/2252382429_6e6c97b6c1.jpg (http://www.flickr.com/photos/markwphoto/2252382429/)

http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2006/2252382555_71f294d4ee_o.jpg (http://www.flickr.com/photos/markwphoto/2252382555)

e r y k
9th of February 2008 (Sat), 19:43
congrats, those look goood :)

so how do those light meters work exactly (i should probably search)...

you fire each flash and the light meter tells you the settings you should have on camera to get a right exposure?

TMR Design
9th of February 2008 (Sat), 21:20
I shot these this past week with a few Vivitars and a 430ex. The L-358 had the exposure perfect on every shot. I love this thing! Why did I go so long without!!

http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2318/2252382429_6e6c97b6c1.jpg (http://www.flickr.com/photos/markwphoto/2252382429/)

http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2006/2252382555_71f294d4ee_o.jpg (http://www.flickr.com/photos/markwphoto/2252382555)

Looks good Mark. Shame on you for waiting so long :D

Cybnew
9th of February 2008 (Sat), 21:24
I know what you mean! I picked mine up a week and a half ago!

TMR Design
9th of February 2008 (Sat), 21:25
congrats, those look goood :)

so how do those light meters work exactly (i should probably search)...

you fire each flash and the light meter tells you the settings you should have on camera to get a right exposure?

Hi eryk,

The light meter is very simple to use. The most common was it's used is in the studio with strobes. You set the shutter speed and the ISO you're using, the meter fires the strobes and takes a reading at subject position. It's extremely accurate.

You can also use a light meter in ambient light and just like a camera, you can use it in an 'aperture priority' mode as well. This allows you to set the desired aperture and ISO and the meter will calculate the correct shutter speed.

You might be thinking that this sounds just like how the camera's metering system works. It is, with one exception. The camera's meter can only measure reflected light and can't measure the light that falls on a subject. Taking an incident reading is the key to nailing exposures with strobes and flash.

e r y k
9th of February 2008 (Sat), 21:32
TMR - thanks :D that was very helpful.

I dont really have real strobes, just a lot of speedlites, would it still be useful to have one?

markhyo
9th of February 2008 (Sat), 21:39
Looks good Mark. Shame on you for waiting so long :D

I actually had an L-508 years ago. Stupid me sold it when I got rid of all my film equipment, but you live you learn. Life is good again now! No more chimping allowed. :D

TMR Design
9th of February 2008 (Sat), 22:00
TMR - thanks :D that was very helpful.

I dont really have real strobes, just a lot of speedlites, would it still be useful to have one?

Absolutely. Once you're using flash units in manual mode off camera the meter takes all the guesswork and trail and error out of the equation. You can control the lighting and the create the image you want rather than the one you end with by default.

markhyo
9th of February 2008 (Sat), 22:24
Absolutely. Once you're using flash units in manual mode off camera the meter takes all the guesswork and trail and error out of the equation. You can control the lighting and the create the image you want rather than the one you end with by default.


I absolutely agree! I'm still getting familiar with the 358 but my creativity and knowledge of lighting situations has gone up. I'm only using vivitars and speedlites so I'm definately finding it useful.

Double Negative
11th of February 2008 (Mon), 13:00
I picked up an older L-308BII recently for the sole purpose of measuring strobes... Definitely the way to go! A light meter makes studio work painless.

TMR Design
11th of February 2008 (Mon), 13:09
If it flashes, use a meter. You'll never need to chimp (I hate that term) again.

If you want black with detail, you've got it. If you want white with detail, no problem. If you want white without detail and don't want any highlight clipping, bingo.

The meter is the ultimate timesaver in the studio and it lets me create and balance lighting to my taste. Praise Sekonic, the god of light. :D

nutsnbolts
11th of February 2008 (Mon), 13:28
Do you guys use light meters for anything else other than in studios?

I have a set of PW's (not opened yet), 2 580ex, deciding on which stands/umbrella kits to get and one of the other things that is suggested to have as well is a light meter and I'm wondering if this is something that I definitely also need to get.

TMR Design
11th of February 2008 (Mon), 13:39
I've taken my meter outside for some ambient light shooting and found that unless I need the 1 degree spot metering that the L-758 offers I can do quite well without the hand held meter.

For anything with people and skin tones I always use the meter.

fastdiablo
11th of February 2008 (Mon), 19:39
i just bought my whole strobist kit -shouldn't have read this thread. now i have to buy more??? CRIPES!! :)

Double Negative
12th of February 2008 (Tue), 08:23
I haven't taken the meter out of the studio yet - I didn't purchase it with that intention... But as Robert says, for people shots it's a darn good idea. The meter really takes any guesswork out of exposure and beats chimping and oogling histograms any day!

Curtis N
12th of February 2008 (Tue), 17:46
I have used a meter for ambient measurements, but I can usually get pretty close without it so I generally don't bother.

But anytime I'm using manual flash, indoors or out, the meter is part of the process.

inward/outward
22nd of February 2008 (Fri), 14:36
With a meter and white balance target, like the Photovision target, you can get exposure and custom WB in one exposure. Now that is efficiency!

fi20100
2nd of April 2008 (Wed), 07:14
I hate POTN and I hate threads like this... (not really)... Now there's another thing I need to get... Just ordered the Skyport universal set + extra receiver yesterday...

Anyway, is the L-358 as useful outside as any lightmeter? :)

markhyo
2nd of April 2008 (Wed), 07:23
The L-358 is very useful outside. Take a look at the following thread. http://photography-on-the.net/forum/showthread.php?t=478656. The shots I took with the couple was metered with the L358.

fi20100
2nd of April 2008 (Wed), 08:17
Thanks Mark :)