I take a lot of shots outdoors, much more so than inside. For the longest time, I've had a tremendous problem with overexposure, but only on my DSLRs. Never on my PnS's. For the longest time, this really bothered and puzzled me. Having to bracket-down a notch or two just to get the shot seemed totally irrational to me, but that's what I seemed to always have to do to get the shot.
I went hunting for some higher end glass, and since I'm a Canon guy, I started investigating Canon's L lenses, and this strange phenomenon suddenly occurred to me. It appeared as almost an epiphany of sorts.
It seems that all of Canon's L glass come with a lens hood
in the box. "This has to be more than a mere coincidence!", I said to myself. "They can't be doing this just out of the goodness of their hearts and to simply add to the cost of their already extraordinarily highly priced lenses."
I'm accumulating some better glass now but that's not what helped the most with my shooting.
I'm old-school SLR so I had UV filters on all my lenses all the time too. Why? Because that's what I had always heard I was suppose to do, so I did.
I ordered genuine Canon hoods for
every lens in my bag, and when they arrived, I removed
every lens filter I had on every lens I own, and gently placed them back in their pretty little round cases that they came in. I had kept them all over the years.
The quality of my shots went up an order of magnitude. I'm not kidding, and I finally figured it out.
Little PnS's have tiny little sensors which equals little light gathering. No overexposure, or at least a lot less potential for the problem.
One of the reasons we use DSLRs is because of the larger sensors and the light gathering these larger sensors provide. One of the downsides is that these sensors gather
all light; sometimes including light we don't see nor mean to gather! After my experiment, I learned that the lens hoods stop a lot of this undesired light. Eureka!
Your results may vary, but I never shoot without a hood anymore; especially outside. Buy a nice hood for one of your nicer walk-around lenses and try it for a week. My bet would be that you too, will never look back.
