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Photography Q&A
Exposure
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<blockquote data-quote="wildshots" data-source="post: 816968" data-attributes="member: 52997"><p>Had a question about exposure. All my images were coming out consistently too dark. I'll be brief here. In setting up my D500 for wildlife, I'd gone with aperture priority, auto ISO. I had also checked the exposure setting and selected 'auto on'. I, mistakenly, thought that would take care of that! It does not. When I actually checked the camera was set way to the left and my shots were underexposed. </p><p></p><p>I bought a used camera and am beginning to understand why the previous owner sold it. I've found many settings that really, really needed changing. Had I known at the outset, I would have simply done a reset before any setup. </p><p></p><p>Getting things worked out and just thought I'd throw this out in case anyone else is experiencing like issues. Oh, I adjusted the exposure then reset to auto on and my photos reflected the correction immediately. </p><p></p><p>Sam</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="wildshots, post: 816968, member: 52997"] Had a question about exposure. All my images were coming out consistently too dark. I'll be brief here. In setting up my D500 for wildlife, I'd gone with aperture priority, auto ISO. I had also checked the exposure setting and selected 'auto on'. I, mistakenly, thought that would take care of that! It does not. When I actually checked the camera was set way to the left and my shots were underexposed. I bought a used camera and am beginning to understand why the previous owner sold it. I've found many settings that really, really needed changing. Had I known at the outset, I would have simply done a reset before any setup. Getting things worked out and just thought I'd throw this out in case anyone else is experiencing like issues. Oh, I adjusted the exposure then reset to auto on and my photos reflected the correction immediately. Sam [/QUOTE]
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