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<blockquote data-quote="lokatz" data-source="post: 638376" data-attributes="member: 43924"><p>Hi there, Some info about camera and lens might help. In your picture, it is hard to tell the sharpness of the face, but parts of the jacket seem to be on the same plane and appear to be reasonably sharp, so not sure sharpness is off. I'd say the primary issue here is that part of the face is too bright and nearly washed out. Either shoot the whole picture a little darker (for instance by setting the exposure compensation to -1 or so), or, if your camera supports it, try shooting in HDR mode, in which the camera automatically does a better job brightening the darker parts and darkening the brightest parts of the shot. The latter affects only JPEGs and makes no difference if you shoot RAW, but you also have the option to make similar adjustments manually in an image editing program.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="lokatz, post: 638376, member: 43924"] Hi there, Some info about camera and lens might help. In your picture, it is hard to tell the sharpness of the face, but parts of the jacket seem to be on the same plane and appear to be reasonably sharp, so not sure sharpness is off. I'd say the primary issue here is that part of the face is too bright and nearly washed out. Either shoot the whole picture a little darker (for instance by setting the exposure compensation to -1 or so), or, if your camera supports it, try shooting in HDR mode, in which the camera automatically does a better job brightening the darker parts and darkening the brightest parts of the shot. The latter affects only JPEGs and makes no difference if you shoot RAW, but you also have the option to make similar adjustments manually in an image editing program. [/QUOTE]
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