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General Photography
Severe underexposure problem spread to two bodies! Help!
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<blockquote data-quote="WeylandYutani" data-source="post: 207044" data-attributes="member: 17181"><p>Yeah, youre understanding me correctly. I suppose i forgot to mention that ive shot several times in the front room before, with the lights on, and never had the shutter speed need to be at 1.5 seconds. That would mean i would have to use my tripod to get a sharp shot in a well lit room, with the f-stop wide open. And as i mentioned, ive set the ISO to maximum and used the flash, and could still only muster 1/20 to get a correct exposure in a well lit room. Before this problem, i could comfortably get down to 1/200 with the same f-stop and iso on my d3100, under the same conditions (front room, lights on). </p><p></p><p>To give another example, when i tried it with my 35mm prime with the f-stop at 1.8, it still wanted between 1-2 seconds shutter speed with iso at 100 to get a correct exposure. If you think about it, 1.5 seconds at f1.8 in a bright, well lit room would normally result in a considerably over-exposed image.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="WeylandYutani, post: 207044, member: 17181"] Yeah, youre understanding me correctly. I suppose i forgot to mention that ive shot several times in the front room before, with the lights on, and never had the shutter speed need to be at 1.5 seconds. That would mean i would have to use my tripod to get a sharp shot in a well lit room, with the f-stop wide open. And as i mentioned, ive set the ISO to maximum and used the flash, and could still only muster 1/20 to get a correct exposure in a well lit room. Before this problem, i could comfortably get down to 1/200 with the same f-stop and iso on my d3100, under the same conditions (front room, lights on). To give another example, when i tried it with my 35mm prime with the f-stop at 1.8, it still wanted between 1-2 seconds shutter speed with iso at 100 to get a correct exposure. If you think about it, 1.5 seconds at f1.8 in a bright, well lit room would normally result in a considerably over-exposed image. [/QUOTE]
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Severe underexposure problem spread to two bodies! Help!
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