At 01:04 AM 8/19/2003 -0700, Moose wrote:
Richard F. Man wrote:
At 02:44 PM 8/19/2003 +0800, you wrote:
I recalled my friend said I had to compensate when taking pictures at
the beach... I assume for the reflection of the sand, but don't recall..
So do I want to stop down 1 stop? Or I want to open 1 stop?
The sand is like the snow, just slightly darker, unless the sand is
really white. So just set the exposure compensation to be about +1 to +1.5.
Correct: Snow/sand brighter than typical 18 0ray scene means you need
extra exposure to correctly expose normal reflectance subjects in the
scene. If you don't, the scene will be underexposed.
If you shoot print film, there should be enough latitude.
Well, maybe, color neg film has more latitude than reversal film, but most
of that is on the overexposure side. Underexposure latitude is seldom more
than 1.5 stops. With potential underexposure due to snow or white sand and
bright sun, it's still better to compensate.
Right, I meant if he set it to +1/+1.5 compensation, then it would be good
enough even if the actual compensation is off.
If you shoot slides, the darned highlight will be blown out and
everything will look mute :-(
I think you have the wrong terminology. 'Blown out highlights' means all
detail lost, in this case, clear film. This would be the result of
overexposure. The result of underexposure is loss of true highlights, loss
of shadow detail and, as you say, a muted look.
Yea, what I mean :-)
// richard <http://www.imagecraft.com>
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