Okay, this might get complicated, so be warned...
All right- we all know that very dark or light subjects can fool our in-camera meters. A bright sunny day will cause the meter to underexpose in order to gain a correct exposure. But we know that to get some detail back into the shadows, we must add some exposure to compensate for this. Hence the need for an exposure compensation function on our cameras. This also goes the opposite way. A very dark subject will cause the meter to overexpose, and so we might underexpose to correct this. Here comes the question, and I'll put it in realistic terms.
I need a shot of a cormorant. These are black(ish) duck-like sea birds. So naturally I would underexpose them to get some detail on their feathers, going along with the notion that the meter is overexposing to compensate for the dark subject. So if I set the camera to the exposure compensation needed to get the birds exposed properly, then how should I approach the metering of the rest of the scene? I could simply go for an ISO change (I'm shooting film here) which would mean going from 100 to say, 160 or 200, to be sure that there is consistency in the metering, and more importantly, to not have to look at the little meter mark in the viewfinder and think, "Well, I'm underexposing the whole scene, so now the standard exposure for this subject is _____ (enter shutter/f-stop here). Well, I want to overexpose this to brighten up the birds a bit, so I should now adjust _______ (enter the answer to my question here!!!).
This has befuddled me so utterly for quite a while now. I use exposure compensation to correctly meter a scene in many situations. So I consider the corrected exposure "standard" for the particular scene. But when I want to then over- or underexpose that metering, I tend to trip up on what the right move to make is. Invariably I get it right, or at least close, but without a camera that saves exposure data, I can't know what settings to remenber. And I really don't have time to write it all down, frame-by-frame. I simply don't have the time. Basically I'm asking, "If I'm underexposing a black bird to correct for the fooled meter, how do I then overexpose that metering of the scene?" I think the answer might be right in front of me, but I can't figure it out.
I know this has gotten really long and I apologize, but I'm just not getting it. Does anyone have any advice here? Am I making any sense?![]()