bobn2
Forum Pro
For a start, I'm not sure what you mean by 'overexposing', we'd need to discuss that before we decided whether it's 'wrong' or not. I agree, it is not a good idea to give an image sufficient exposure that the sensor saturates, that means that the highlights clip. Short of that, though, I think it's a good idea to use the biggest (in terms of EV) exposure that you can without getting too little DOF or too much motion blur (and you alone can be the judge of what is too little or too much). If that exposure doesn't result in the density of output image that you want, I would submit that you've set the ISO control wrongly.If he turns up, that's fine, but my comment was not addressed to him, so why drag him in here? If he likes to comment or correct me in any way he is of course welcome, never the less, overexposing an image without reason is wrong."Bob" would claim otherwise. You can argue over it with him when he turns up.While the E-5 images seem to be underexposed, both the 7D and the D300 are definitely overexposed, blowing the details in the images.
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Bob