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<blockquote data-quote="WayneF" data-source="post: 550648" data-attributes="member: 12496"><p>Camera P mode is normally the easiest with flash outdoors, even ideal. Pro wedding photographers call P mode Professional Mode, joking about how they can move from indoors to outdoors with flash without issue.</p><p></p><p>What were the details you saw? 1/200 second shutter, and what ISO and what aperture did it try?</p><p></p><p>If we try camera A mode in bright sun, we might not know to stop down aperture enough to avoid a HI error. But P mode will simply stop it down as needed. But if you set ISO too high, it will just need to stop down more, and might then hit a f/22 or f/32 limit of your lens. So try ISO 100 outdoors. </p><p></p><p>Saying, ISO 100 1/200 f/11 is Sunny 16 as expected in bright sun. But ISO 800 requires f/32, which not all lens can do. Try ISO 100. Should be easy.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="WayneF, post: 550648, member: 12496"] Camera P mode is normally the easiest with flash outdoors, even ideal. Pro wedding photographers call P mode Professional Mode, joking about how they can move from indoors to outdoors with flash without issue. What were the details you saw? 1/200 second shutter, and what ISO and what aperture did it try? If we try camera A mode in bright sun, we might not know to stop down aperture enough to avoid a HI error. But P mode will simply stop it down as needed. But if you set ISO too high, it will just need to stop down more, and might then hit a f/22 or f/32 limit of your lens. So try ISO 100 outdoors. Saying, ISO 100 1/200 f/11 is Sunny 16 as expected in bright sun. But ISO 800 requires f/32, which not all lens can do. Try ISO 100. Should be easy. [/QUOTE]
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