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General Photography
Wild Life
Mike D90's "Birds in Flight" Learning Thread
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<blockquote data-quote="Mike D90" data-source="post: 232227" data-attributes="member: 17556"><p>I have been trying to read and understand something. I notice I blow out my whites a lot of times on my shots. Is this due to me shooting against a bright sky or against a dark background?</p><p></p><p>Do I need to dial in +1 or +2 EV compensations or -1 or -2 compensation?</p><p></p><p>Something I read yesterday said the new thing with bird photogs was to shoot as close to over exposure as possible without clipping the whites. Almost all of the photo information would be very close to the edge of the right side of the histogram with no clipping. I am a little unsure about this and wanted to ask if anyone else understood or recommended this method?</p><p></p><p>I would really like to get the details close without blowing out the white.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Mike D90, post: 232227, member: 17556"] I have been trying to read and understand something. I notice I blow out my whites a lot of times on my shots. Is this due to me shooting against a bright sky or against a dark background? Do I need to dial in +1 or +2 EV compensations or -1 or -2 compensation? Something I read yesterday said the new thing with bird photogs was to shoot as close to over exposure as possible without clipping the whites. Almost all of the photo information would be very close to the edge of the right side of the histogram with no clipping. I am a little unsure about this and wanted to ask if anyone else understood or recommended this method? I would really like to get the details close without blowing out the white. [/QUOTE]
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Mike D90's "Birds in Flight" Learning Thread
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