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Kenko Puts Exposure On The Right Track; You Still Need A Handheld Meter In The Digital Age
The digital camera in your hands provides you with loads of technology. It allows you to bracket automatically in a series of three or even five exposures, depending on model and user settings. But given the limited space on a memory card (notably when shooting raw at high pixel counts), the time spent to shoot all those frames, the limited buffer memory that you might fill up in the process, and the fact that you could—and should—instead be moving on to your next picture, do you really want to devote all those exposures to that one subject? In addition, those bracketed exposures are no guarantee of getting one usable exposure. Wouldn’t it be better to take the guesswork out of exposure with just one tool? And what happens when you use studio flash, something the camera’s metering system was never designed to deal with? Even using multiple shoe mounts can be tricky, unless you have the right tools.
The answer is a handheld exposure meter, notably one that reads both ambient light and flash, and Kenko offers two, the KFM-2100 and KFM-1100. There’s also a color meter, the KCM-3100. But we’ll focus on the top-of-the-line KFM-2100, and you’ll soon see why. The KFM-2100: The Swiss Army Knife Of Meters
Putting Exposure On The Spot
Jack Neubart is a contributor to Shutterbug magazine and the author of Photographer’s
Exposure Handbook (Amphoto, 2007).
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