If the instrument supports an
ambient measurement capability, then it will be used. If the
insrument does not have an ambient mode, then an emissive
measurement mode can be used, although typically many illuminants
are too bright to directly point the instrument at. A work-around
is to reflect the illuminant from a spectrally flat white surface.
A good candidate for this is a piece of white, fine textured
polystyrene foam. [The suitability of a reflector can be checked
using
spotread -S to
check that the reflection characteristic is close to flat.]
This is done by placing the paper
such that it is uniformly illuminated with reasonable brightness,
and then placing the instrument so that it receives the reflected
light from the paper. This is typically achieved by placing the
instrument close to the paper at about 45º, so that it's aperture
has a clear view of the illuminated paper, but avoiding shadowing
the region that is in view, and also avoiding measuring specular
reflection if the paper is glossy.