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General Photography
HDR
HDR and Exposure Control
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<blockquote data-quote="WhiteLight" data-source="post: 175299" data-attributes="member: 9556"><p>Welcome Mitch.</p><p>You just need to bracket your photos...</p><p>That's usually achieved by the camera changing the exposure levels for each shot.</p><p>Usually (this can be adjusted) it takes the shot at what you specify as the correct exposure & one underexposed & one over exposed.</p><p></p><p>Not sure of the 5200 has a dedicated 'BKT' (bracketing) button, but i've assinged that to the Fn button on my 5100.</p><p></p><p>So once you set the camera in bracketing mode by setting the exposure variation between the shots (1/3 stop, 1 stop, 2 stops etc), place the camera on a tripod preferably or if you are good at hand held, go ahead.</p><p></p><p>The camera will shoot the same scene with 3 diff exposures by varying the shutter speed.</p><p>You wouldn't need to compensate in any way.</p><p></p><p>Your HDR image will need to be created by combining the 3 images so the picture can have the best pixels from all 3 shots.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="WhiteLight, post: 175299, member: 9556"] Welcome Mitch. You just need to bracket your photos... That's usually achieved by the camera changing the exposure levels for each shot. Usually (this can be adjusted) it takes the shot at what you specify as the correct exposure & one underexposed & one over exposed. Not sure of the 5200 has a dedicated 'BKT' (bracketing) button, but i've assinged that to the Fn button on my 5100. So once you set the camera in bracketing mode by setting the exposure variation between the shots (1/3 stop, 1 stop, 2 stops etc), place the camera on a tripod preferably or if you are good at hand held, go ahead. The camera will shoot the same scene with 3 diff exposures by varying the shutter speed. You wouldn't need to compensate in any way. Your HDR image will need to be created by combining the 3 images so the picture can have the best pixels from all 3 shots. [/QUOTE]
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