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Photography Q&A
Wear sunglasses when taking photo shots
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<blockquote data-quote="blackstar" data-source="post: 807208" data-attributes="member: 47518"><p>Not sure if this topic suits the photo Q&A section, but fire it up for your experience, comments, and advice anyway. I have been wearing prescribed glasses with a "transitional" feature for a long time. It's been my all-time-around glasses except for my computer/reading glasses. So since the end of 2019 when acquired my first DSLR D3500, I have been wearing my "sunglasses" to shoot photos all the time indoor or outdoor, setting the viewfinder with it. Thousands of photos have been shot this way up to now. Recently I started to notice some photos I took in a country area seem to be a bit over-exposed (looked from the computer screen). I think I have adjusted and checked exp with VF (z6ii) at the shooting site and it looked like the right exposure from the VF. Now realize this discrepancy happens because I was consciously unaware of wearing sunglasses at shooting. This is further verified when I check the older photos I took for the past three years (except for the nightscape). So now the Q: how can one resolve this issue or the best way to make all things (blocking and not blocking sunlight) right when taking a photo shooting session? Any thoughts? (I am due for newly prescribed glasses soon and struggling to decide if to add the transitional feature again for this matter... )</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="blackstar, post: 807208, member: 47518"] Not sure if this topic suits the photo Q&A section, but fire it up for your experience, comments, and advice anyway. I have been wearing prescribed glasses with a "transitional" feature for a long time. It's been my all-time-around glasses except for my computer/reading glasses. So since the end of 2019 when acquired my first DSLR D3500, I have been wearing my "sunglasses" to shoot photos all the time indoor or outdoor, setting the viewfinder with it. Thousands of photos have been shot this way up to now. Recently I started to notice some photos I took in a country area seem to be a bit over-exposed (looked from the computer screen). I think I have adjusted and checked exp with VF (z6ii) at the shooting site and it looked like the right exposure from the VF. Now realize this discrepancy happens because I was consciously unaware of wearing sunglasses at shooting. This is further verified when I check the older photos I took for the past three years (except for the nightscape). So now the Q: how can one resolve this issue or the best way to make all things (blocking and not blocking sunlight) right when taking a photo shooting session? Any thoughts? (I am due for newly prescribed glasses soon and struggling to decide if to add the transitional feature again for this matter... ) [/QUOTE]
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Wear sunglasses when taking photo shots
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