Photographing White Snowy Landscapes
- hirejn
- Feb 7, 2013
- 2 min read
Photographing bright white snowy landscapes is one of the trickiest tasks in photography, if you're a beginner using reflective metering. When everything is white, the camera calculates an exposure that will render it medium gray. The result is often flat and disappointing, unless you know how to correct for it.
I did a fun study of snow covering a wooden fence and tree in a field near the Horicon Marsh. I had my trusty Sekonic L-758 incident meter with me. The incident meter measures the light illuminating the scene, rather than the light reflecting off of the scene, so it renders tones accurately. The highly reflective snow doesn't fool the incident meter because the meter doesn't "see" the snow or any other tones. It "sees" only the light illuminating the scene and calculates an exposure for that light.
I made the image at ISO 400, but I don't remember the rest of the settings and don't care to look them up. The more important thing is the color technique.
Comments