I see you're in Canada. Nowadays, in standard Metropolitan French (i.e. most of France, Belgium, probably Africa), people usually make no distinction between closed E (chanté) and open E (chantais). Thus, the future and the conditional sound the same. However, Quebec accent maintains the distinction, which is as Su.Ki. described. Quebec accent also distinguishes between the open E in mètre and the long open E (realized as a gently gliding diphthong) in maître. Quebec accent also distinguishes “in” and “un”, as well as the open EU in “jeune” and the closed EU in “jeûne”. Also the vowels in “pattes” and “pâtes”. Quebec accent is quite conservative in this regard.