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Category: Problems with Images

Photography Question 

Theresa L. Witt
 

Black has no detail in my photos


I shoot with a Nikon D300s and I am noticing that the color black has no detail. Is there a setting or technique I can use to prevent this? It is especially bad when there is very light or white areas and dark areas in the same photo.

Thanks.


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December 28, 2010

 
- Usman M. Bajwa

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  Try using the HDR technique by bracketing your exposure to recover the details in the dark portions of your image, this will come specially handy in contrasty (dark and bright areas within the frame) situations. Hope this helps.

UB.


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December 27, 2010

 

Bob Cammarata
 
 
  Glade Creek
Glade Creek

Without D-Lighting

Bob Cammarata

 
  Glade Creek
Glade Creek

With Capture NX D-Lighting applied

Bob Cammarata

 
 
Digital cameras (like slide films) have very narrow exposure latitudes.
Your highlight to shadow ratios will never be perfectly balanced in extreme conditions.
Fortunately for us, there is a way to get a little more detail in the shadow areas.
There is an "Active D-Lighting" setting on the D300 which can be utilized to balance harsh conditions at the scene. (Refer to pages 167-168 of the D-300 manual for more details.)

Capture NX Software, which should have been included with your D-300s, also has a "D-Lighting" feature which can balance the highlight to shadow ratio after the fact.
The attached examples show a typical high contrast scene with and without D-Lighting.


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December 28, 2010

 

doug Nelson
  Look at the histogram for images in which the shadows look blocked up. Does your histogram "train wreck" to the left? (no tapering off, just an abrupt pile-up of darks) If so, reshoot it, giving a plus one exposure compensation. Try a plus 1.5 or a plus 2.

My Pentax DSLR has settings to tailor the jpg image to your liking, with choices over contrast, sharpening and saturation levels. Check to see if you have Contrast set too high.

Keep in mind, too, that some images DO exceed the contrast range of your digital sensor, and will have SOME blown whites and/or blocked shadows.

Finally, shoot RAW more often and use a good RAW processing software (PS Elements is a bargain at under $100) to adjust your capture to your liking.


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December 28, 2010

 
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