seashoreCM
All around nice guy.
- Joined
- Aug 25, 2001
- Messages
- 23,476
FOr those of you who used Polaroid (instant film) cameras, exposure compensation works like the lighten/darken control. It lets the camera compute its automatic exposure and then overrides that by a small fixed absolute amount you choose.
If you take the same picture but don't aim the camera exactly the same way, the camera's automatic exposure may calculate differently depending on whether the middle of the picture now contains brighter or darker subject matter. This adds to the confusion when you adjust exposure compensation and see no change or an unwanted drastic change. (plus lightens the picture overall and minus darkens the picture overall).
When taking night shots, you almost always want a night setting so the camera doesn't try to calculate a daylight looking picture which is both unnatural for the situation and runs the camera up against its limits resulting in motion blur from a slow shutter and/or graininess from a bumped up ISO. If your camera does not have a "night" setting, minusing out the exposure compensation is a good alternative.
Digital camera hints: http://members.aol.com/ajaynejr/digicam.htm
If you take the same picture but don't aim the camera exactly the same way, the camera's automatic exposure may calculate differently depending on whether the middle of the picture now contains brighter or darker subject matter. This adds to the confusion when you adjust exposure compensation and see no change or an unwanted drastic change. (plus lightens the picture overall and minus darkens the picture overall).
When taking night shots, you almost always want a night setting so the camera doesn't try to calculate a daylight looking picture which is both unnatural for the situation and runs the camera up against its limits resulting in motion blur from a slow shutter and/or graininess from a bumped up ISO. If your camera does not have a "night" setting, minusing out the exposure compensation is a good alternative.
Digital camera hints: http://members.aol.com/ajaynejr/digicam.htm