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Photography Q&A
Dark edge on the photo and exposure setting
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<blockquote data-quote="LouCioccio" data-source="post: 681987" data-attributes="member: 12542"><p>On situation #2 see what the metering was set to. Depending what you want to achieve if its the baton twirlers then change the metering to center weight or spot. As others have suggested you can use software an example is layers one layer for the baton twirlers exposed properly with levels , curves or even in RAW; naturally the background is blown. The second layer exposed background like you already have and then a mask to paint in the twirlers.</p><p>You can find other ways but the best is in camera and I realize this is a moving scene.</p><p>This is one way of doing it right. Here it is doing it the levels mask.</p><p>Lou Cioccio</p><p></p><p>[ATTACH]297952[/ATTACH]</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="LouCioccio, post: 681987, member: 12542"] On situation #2 see what the metering was set to. Depending what you want to achieve if its the baton twirlers then change the metering to center weight or spot. As others have suggested you can use software an example is layers one layer for the baton twirlers exposed properly with levels , curves or even in RAW; naturally the background is blown. The second layer exposed background like you already have and then a mask to paint in the twirlers. You can find other ways but the best is in camera and I realize this is a moving scene. This is one way of doing it right. Here it is doing it the levels mask. Lou Cioccio [ATTACH=CONFIG]297952._xfImport[/ATTACH] [/QUOTE]
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Photography Q&A
Dark edge on the photo and exposure setting
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