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Computers and Software
Underexposed Photos and the Histogram
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<blockquote data-quote="Pierro" data-source="post: 96475" data-attributes="member: 8517"><p>Bracketing takes a series of shots, over and under your EV setting. How many shots you can set depends on your camera, but since you havent listed any camera gear in your profile, cant give you any help there</p><p></p><p>I can take up to 9 , so say i meter the scene and then choose bracketing ( 9 shots ), i will get the original metered shot, plus another 4 under exposed in ever increasing values and 4 over exposed in ever increasing values. Those values you will have to set in the menu, so something like 1/3rd or 1 etc. You then combine all 9 in Photoshop as one photo and process. This will avoid the need to mess too much bringing up dark areas in such shots, because that will show even more noise than is already evident in your building shot</p><p></p><p>Helen kinda said what i would have. The girl needs less extra processing than the building, but the building can still be sorted</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Pierro, post: 96475, member: 8517"] Bracketing takes a series of shots, over and under your EV setting. How many shots you can set depends on your camera, but since you havent listed any camera gear in your profile, cant give you any help there I can take up to 9 , so say i meter the scene and then choose bracketing ( 9 shots ), i will get the original metered shot, plus another 4 under exposed in ever increasing values and 4 over exposed in ever increasing values. Those values you will have to set in the menu, so something like 1/3rd or 1 etc. You then combine all 9 in Photoshop as one photo and process. This will avoid the need to mess too much bringing up dark areas in such shots, because that will show even more noise than is already evident in your building shot Helen kinda said what i would have. The girl needs less extra processing than the building, but the building can still be sorted [/QUOTE]
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Underexposed Photos and the Histogram
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