Hi ,
Exposure has always been a hugely important aspect of photography. Back in the days of slide film, when we had very little room for error, your exposure chops were pretty much the
main benchmark that determined your technical ability as a photographer.
Throw in some fast moving subjects, and things became even more chaotic. Imagine trying to figure out how to meter on a scene with very tricky lighting, while trying to capture the peak of the action. If you could nail it, you might have gotten lucky. If you could do it again and again, then you had mad camera skills.
Over the years, people have
asked me how I meter, and I've always been happy to share my knowledge and methods with people.
However, if you ask me today how I meter, the answer would be very different than it would have been twenty years ago.
In the old days, much of that discussion would be centered (no pun intended) around which metering pattern I found most useful for any given scene. A complex scene with a mixture of brights and darks might require a
matrix, or multi-segment meter, which analyzes the scene and then uses algorithms to come up with the right look.