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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D3300
Blurry / underexposed indoor images
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<blockquote data-quote="gustafson" data-source="post: 494343" data-attributes="member: 40735"><p>Took some D3300 test shots with the 35mm prime at a daytime get together today. The shots were all of people / kids indoors under incandescent lighting with varying amounts of natural light. I was initially shooting in aperture priority mode (F2-F8) , but saw that a number of the pics were blurry. So I switched to Shutter priority with a speed of 1/500s, but the pics were still blurry and/or underexposed, so I dialed in some exposure compensation, which helped reduce the problem but didn't eliminate it. Short of using a tripod, what should I have been doing differently to prevent blurry, underexposed shots? Thanks in advance!</p><p></p><p></p><p>Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="gustafson, post: 494343, member: 40735"] Took some D3300 test shots with the 35mm prime at a daytime get together today. The shots were all of people / kids indoors under incandescent lighting with varying amounts of natural light. I was initially shooting in aperture priority mode (F2-F8) , but saw that a number of the pics were blurry. So I switched to Shutter priority with a speed of 1/500s, but the pics were still blurry and/or underexposed, so I dialed in some exposure compensation, which helped reduce the problem but didn't eliminate it. Short of using a tripod, what should I have been doing differently to prevent blurry, underexposed shots? Thanks in advance! Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk [/QUOTE]
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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D3300
Blurry / underexposed indoor images
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