at this point you understand how exposure works
you know what shutter speed aperture and iso do
you have started to recognise light
now it is time to take the next step
remove the safety net
turning the meter off
your camera has a built in light meter
it is useful
accurate
reliable
but it also encourages a habit
look
check
adjust
shoot
you react to what the camera tells you
instead of deciding for yourself
a different approach
for a short time try something different
ignore the meter
set your exposure based on what you see
not what the camera suggests
start simple
begin in consistent light
a bright sunny day
use sunny 16 as your reference
set your exposure
take a shot
then check the result
not the meter
the image
too bright
adjust
too dark
adjust
repeat
building confidence
at first this feels uncertain
you will be wrong
that is part of the process
but with each adjustment something changes
you begin to trust your judgement
you stop needing confirmation before you act
what you learn
you learn how light behaves
not in theory
but in practice
you see how different scenes affect exposure
you notice patterns
you start predicting results
before you press the shutter
when to use the meter
this is not about rejecting technology
the meter is still useful
especially in difficult or changing light
but now it becomes a tool
not a crutch
you use it when needed
not by default
the goal
the goal is not to be perfect
it is to become aware
because once you can judge exposure with your eyes
you are no longer dependent on the camera
and that changes how you see
once you stop reacting
you can start choosing what matters
at first, you learn to recognise light
then something else becomes clear:
it doesn’t stay the same for long
next: the photograph you have to wait for
previous: estimating exposure with the sunny 16 rule