What is the handheld device used near a subject’s face on film sets?

Asked 7/23/2012

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I’ve seen crew members hold a small device with a white dome near an actor or subject’s face during filming or photo shoots. What is this device called, and what is it used for?

Originally by Photography Stack Exchange contributor. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0

Photography Stack Exchange contributor

14y ago

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That is an incident light meter.

It's used in both motion and still photography, although with modern cameras the built-in light meter is usually so good (and so convenient) that separate meters are not as essential as they once were.

There is a difference, though, because a camera's built-in meter measures light reflected back to the camera, whereas this measures light falling on the subject. (Or more specifically, on the little white dome, which helps mimic the way light falls on a real three-dimensional subject.) A key difference is that the reflective meter can't tell the difference between a dark subject in really bright light and light subject in dim light — you have to use exposure compensation when the subject isn't middle brightness. An incident meter gives an absolute value.

These devices often have special features for measuring bursts of light from flashes — useful for photography and not so much for cinema. Some fancy models can also measure color temperature for white balance. This model looks like the Sekonic L-358, or a close cousin.

More on this here: Why use a dedicated light meter instead of the one built into the camera?

Originally by user1943. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0

user1943

14y ago

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It’s an incident light meter. It measures the light falling onto the subject, usually by placing the white dome at the subject’s position and aiming it appropriately.

This is different from a camera’s built-in meter, which is usually a reflective meter: it measures light bouncing back from the scene. Reflective meters can be fooled by very dark or very bright subjects, often requiring exposure compensation. An incident meter instead gives a reading based on the actual illumination on the subject, which makes exposure more consistent regardless of subject tone.

They’re used in both filmmaking and still photography. Modern camera meters are very capable, so separate handheld meters are less essential than they once were, but incident meters are still useful when you want precise, repeatable exposure readings.

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