Jay Williams
Senior Member
If you take a photo of a black cat in a dark room on auto exposure, the cat will appear grey (not black). If you take a photo of snow on a bright, sunny day, the snow will appear grey (not white).
The camera doesn't know you're shooting a black cat, or snow. You either have to use exposure comp (or manual mode) based on the histogram/LCD, or use a grey card or light meter. This isn't rocket science. Just fundamental exposure skills. NO camera in the world will get these right without user intervention.
Jay
Jay Philip Williams Photographic Design
http://www.jpwphoto.com
The camera doesn't know you're shooting a black cat, or snow. You either have to use exposure comp (or manual mode) based on the histogram/LCD, or use a grey card or light meter. This isn't rocket science. Just fundamental exposure skills. NO camera in the world will get these right without user intervention.
Jay
--Interesting. I've seen LOTS of shots with + - 1/3 stop or so. Just
never seen anyone pull it back 1.5 stops before. That's a lot of
light to manipulate with that tool it seems.
I guess I just don't get the WHY of it.
Jay Philip Williams Photographic Design
http://www.jpwphoto.com