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Photography Q&A
Auto D lighting?
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<blockquote data-quote="TwistedThrottle" data-source="post: 741611" data-attributes="member: 46724"><p>[USER=41851]@dachshund[/USER]</p><p>Do you shoot RAW or JPG? I shoot RAW+JPG and usually keep D lighting turned on. D lighting does not(*) have an affect on your RAW image, just JPG's. What it does do is give you a better looking image on the back of the camera when the scene has a large dynamic range and better looking JPG's, so if you're only utilizing the JPG's it means less post processing.</p><p>* D lighting does affect the metering and so the effect will be slightly darker RAW images compared to not using D lighting. I much prefer darker RAW images to bright ones, I find it easier to pull the shadows up than pull down the highlights. It's very useful in a situation with a large dynamic range, less so with less tho.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TwistedThrottle, post: 741611, member: 46724"] [USER=41851]@dachshund[/USER] Do you shoot RAW or JPG? I shoot RAW+JPG and usually keep D lighting turned on. D lighting does not(*) have an affect on your RAW image, just JPG's. What it does do is give you a better looking image on the back of the camera when the scene has a large dynamic range and better looking JPG's, so if you're only utilizing the JPG's it means less post processing. * D lighting does affect the metering and so the effect will be slightly darker RAW images compared to not using D lighting. I much prefer darker RAW images to bright ones, I find it easier to pull the shadows up than pull down the highlights. It's very useful in a situation with a large dynamic range, less so with less tho. [/QUOTE]
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Auto D lighting?
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