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General Photography
Low Light & Night
ettr(expose to the right) low light photography
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<blockquote data-quote="randyspann" data-source="post: 318946" data-attributes="member: 21503"><p>Interesting...I thought that astrophotography is the one place where ETTR breaks down. If you expose so that the star blips on the histogram are far to the right, what's remaining to the left is darkness amplified, ie. noise. I have always exposed nighttime sky to get the star 'blips' are to the left and thus not amplify darkness (noise).</p><p> Can anyone shed some light (sorry for the pun) on this?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="randyspann, post: 318946, member: 21503"] Interesting...I thought that astrophotography is the one place where ETTR breaks down. If you expose so that the star blips on the histogram are far to the right, what's remaining to the left is darkness amplified, ie. noise. I have always exposed nighttime sky to get the star 'blips' are to the left and thus not amplify darkness (noise). Can anyone shed some light (sorry for the pun) on this? [/QUOTE]
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General Photography
Low Light & Night
ettr(expose to the right) low light photography
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