Author Topic: Practical Application for "EV"?  (Read 1172 times)

6cmsquare

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Practical Application for "EV"?
« on: March 19, 2015, 05:33:46 AM »
Ok, so I in the midst of reading Ansel Adams' "The Negative" and the Zone System immediately makes sense to me, -matter of fact I walked around all day looking at things and visualizing them as "zone V + 2 stops" or "totally zone II"  however, -regarding the EV#, I'm struggling to think of a situation where knowing the EV# of an exposure would help, being that an EV# can be equal to any number of f.stop and shutter time combinations.   

Can someone enlighten me on a situation where calculating the EV is applicable?
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Jack Johnson

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Re: Practical Application for "EV"?
« Reply #1 on: March 19, 2015, 06:28:57 AM »
I have two cameras that have counterrotating shutter and aperture controls on the lens barrel, and are marked with EV. What I like about it is that I can use sunny/16 or meter, adjust to the matching EV, and then make a shutter speed or aperture selection but rotate both rings simultaneously and maintain the same exposure.

If you use one of Francois' infamous paper exposure meters (such as http://expomat.tripod.com/), they're always marked with EV, which makes "cheating" with an EV-marked camera easy as well.

Francois

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Re: Practical Application for "EV"?
« Reply #2 on: March 19, 2015, 01:41:26 PM »
To be honest, I never really got the value of only using EV in my metering...
I know it can make things supposedly more easy but I just don't get it...
Francois

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02Pilot

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Re: Practical Application for "EV"?
« Reply #3 on: March 19, 2015, 01:47:28 PM »
I use it to count steps from sunny-16 (or sunny-11, or whatever I'm using at the moment), assuming EV15 as the starting point. Quick and dirty, but it works pretty well for me.
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Option 8

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Re: Practical Application for "EV"?
« Reply #4 on: March 19, 2015, 03:48:51 PM »
If you plan to ever shoot with a vintage Polaroid camera...youll love EV. In fact, most of the models exclusively have EV settings and nothing else.



The Polaroid #625 exposure meter for these cameras is also an EV only device, makes using them with a Polaroid camera a perfect match.

Even the high end 110A/B models with their Prontor manual shutters have EV marks on it for quick, no thinking, exposure setting.



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