The correct exposure (aperture and shutter settings) can be derived from tables or calculators or by direct measurement of the subject luminance with a light meter. Cameras with through-the-lens (TTL) exposure meters—and also hand-held meters pointed at the subject—measure the average reflected light intensity, yielding reliable exposures for subjects of average contrast and brightness distribution. Subjects of extreme contrast or very bright or dark dominant areas need overriding exposure corrections; automatic cameras often have provision for this. Such a TTL measurement is usually centre-weighted (predominantly based on the image centre). Some cameras (and meters) permit spot readings covering a small ...(100 of 19384 words)