Pic Taken By D70s Seem Dark....


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I also seems to have this prob... Setting the EV to +.3 or .7 will help..??
 

sigh...

those who complained abt D70 (or for dat matter any DSLR) underexposing, pls go and pick up this book from ur nearest library - Understanding Exposure by Bryan Peterson.

adding/subtracting EV or watever won't help u a bit, if u dunno how the camera 'sees'. :rolleyes:
 

haha. Do u think go Digital Save time Save Money?? u r totally WRONG . :bsmilie:
 

gernie said:
haha. Do u think go Digital Save time Save Money?? u r totally WRONG . :bsmilie:

Care to explain the save money part?
 

helfizad said:
I also seems to have this prob... Setting the EV to +.3 or .7 will help..??

As we are always shooting different scenes all the time, there is no fixed formula for the setting of EV, or whatever. Knowing how the camera reacts (and the laws of photography) with all the little adjustments will enable you tackle the challenge of difficult scenes.
 

nightwolf75 said:
sigh...

those who complained abt D70 (or for dat matter any DSLR) underexposing, pls go and pick up this book from ur nearest library - Understanding Exposure by Bryan Peterson.

adding/subtracting EV or watever won't help u a bit, if u dunno how the camera 'sees'. :rolleyes:


Just nice I am going library later, will check it out..:)
 

Go to edit your curve, and enhance your camera setting using Nikon Capture. After I have done this way, I am very pleased with the Picture output (Jpeg) from the D70..... trust me! :)
 

For digital images, it is always a better option to underexpose than overexpose. Nikon's metering has always been conservative, always a little too afraid to blow anything.

Looking at the images, quite a far bit of the image is white, or fairly white. As a result, it gets "fooled" into thinking it is a bright scene.

However, I thought Nikon's RGB metering, which claims to be a world's first, can recognise colour and compensate for that. Apparently not. :(
 

thomas.h said:
Care to explain the save money part?

Have to buy speedy PCs, have to buy Adobe Photoshop, and also time taken to PP photos = money...


:devil:
 

nightwolf75 said:
sigh...

those who complained abt D70 (or for dat matter any DSLR) underexposing, pls go and pick up this book from ur nearest library - Understanding Exposure by Bryan Peterson.

adding/subtracting EV or watever won't help u a bit, if u dunno how the camera 'sees'. :rolleyes:

18% grey. That's what the meter sees. Check the white paint on the bridge, its under. Spot meter on your subject should help to get the right exposure reading.
 

xiaodi77 said:
Go to edit your curve, and enhance your camera setting using Nikon Capture. After I have done this way, I am very pleased with the Picture output (Jpeg) from the D70..... trust me! :)

how u do that in Nikon Capture
 

i try to install the trial version but seems cant open lei.... anyone face this prob
 

helfizad said:
i try to install the trial version but seems cant open lei.... anyone face this prob

have you forgotten to link your camera to the PC with USB cable??

you have to do that... the software needs to detect for the camera
 

marcwang said:
For digital images, it is always a better option to underexpose than overexpose. Nikon's metering has always been conservative, always a little too afraid to blow anything.

Looking at the images, quite a far bit of the image is white, or fairly white. As a result, it gets "fooled" into thinking it is a bright scene.

However, I thought Nikon's RGB metering, which claims to be a world's first, can recognise colour and compensate for that. Apparently not. :(
Eh, white is composed of all three colors. Even then, the camera will recommend a metering to prevent blowing out. Too conservative at times? May be. That is when the photographer should know when to use the other metering mode. I guess it is possible that Nikon expects too much from the photographer and makes the cameras too pro...
 

as eikin mentioned, the sensor keeps the shadow details, but you will need to PP to brint it out.

sample from your pix
under.jpg

notice the shadow details kept in his skin.
 

xiaodi77 said:
have you forgotten to link your camera to the PC with USB cable??

you have to do that... the software needs to detect for the camera


they ask for product key..... where to find one????
 

helfizad said:
they ask for product key..... where to find one????

Buy original full version.
 

marcwang said:
However, I thought Nikon's RGB metering, which claims to be a world's first, can recognise colour and compensate for that. Apparently not. :(
Eh.. that really depends on the metering mode you're in, if I used spot meter for the shot, I can easily expose it correctly.
 

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