Hi, new to the forums here. Hopefully, someone can help me out with my situation, I would very much appreciate it. I found one similar post here, but no solution.
Some of my photos that I've recently taken are in low light environments (either at night or under shade). When I look at at the photos directly on my 1 S1 camera, they look bright and clear, in which I can see colors and shapes. However, after importing them into iPhoto, they appear much darker, in which the same areas are pretty much black or way lower in contrast. I figured it's just a difference between LCD displays, so I played around with brightness and contrast in iPhoto, but now the same photos have too much noise. Also, when I plug in the camera directly into my TV by hdmi, the photos still look brighter on the TV than the imported ones, as seen on the Nikon LCD.
Can someone help explain this situation to me? And if there's a solution for these pictures, that would be great. Thanks.
Settings: Creative S mode, 1/50 shutter, F 3.5, 2.7-3.0EV, no flash, ISO 3200 (? iso was on auto, but goes to 3200 in dark environments), and brightness 0
Some of my photos that I've recently taken are in low light environments (either at night or under shade). When I look at at the photos directly on my 1 S1 camera, they look bright and clear, in which I can see colors and shapes. However, after importing them into iPhoto, they appear much darker, in which the same areas are pretty much black or way lower in contrast. I figured it's just a difference between LCD displays, so I played around with brightness and contrast in iPhoto, but now the same photos have too much noise. Also, when I plug in the camera directly into my TV by hdmi, the photos still look brighter on the TV than the imported ones, as seen on the Nikon LCD.
Can someone help explain this situation to me? And if there's a solution for these pictures, that would be great. Thanks.
Settings: Creative S mode, 1/50 shutter, F 3.5, 2.7-3.0EV, no flash, ISO 3200 (? iso was on auto, but goes to 3200 in dark environments), and brightness 0