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#1
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Burn out when shooting reds...How do you adjust your camera?
My photos of reds have a burned out look. How can I adjust my camera to compensate for the way my digital camera reads reds?
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#2
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Meter off the red and open up the exposure +1/2 to +1 depending on how much brighter than midtone it appears. Alternatively meter off green foliage in same light go minus on exposure. Will need to be in manual or a program mode that allows you to change and lock in the exposure.
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#3
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Thank you!
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#4
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Make sure your white balance is set correctly. Red in particular is thrown off by the wrong white balance.
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#5
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__________________
Chuck PSE6/CS3/LR2/WinXP/Canon 450D, G10/Panasonic LX3 |
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#6
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Maybe I'm not understanding the problem but to me Burnt Out Reds means they are over exposed. A previous post suggests metering of the Red and then compensating by + 1/2 to 1 stop. I think that should be -1/2 to 1 stop so that the Red becomes under exposed - i.e darker.
Of couse RAW would be a great way to go. Colin
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Take nothing but photographs, leave nothing but footprints __________________________________________________ My Web Site |
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#7
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Colin, I understood it the same way as you - red channel clipping (or red color 'burnout") and I also thought the exposure value adjustment needed to be negative as opposed to positive.
__________________
Chuck PSE6/CS3/LR2/WinXP/Canon 450D, G10/Panasonic LX3 |
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#8
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If you meter off a color that is brighter than medium, you will have to open up as much as it is brighter. Such as metering snow, need to go + 1&1/2-2 stops. Red is brighter than medium so need to go +. Now if you meter off something around the red that is medium then would go -. For instance I photographed a white mushroom surround by green moss and metered off the moss. The -2 exposure was the best. Had I metered off the white mushroom would have gone +2.
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#9
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Linda: I wonder if the camera sensor can adequately deal with the full range of red tones..? If red is being clipped, the only solution that I know is to go negative on the exposure compensation. A + adjustment would exacerbate the loss of red highlights.
I recently took some macro photos of some giant red hibiscus flowers which essentially filled the frame - the result was a nearly disastrous loss of red highlights. My saving grace was that I was shooting RAW and the Recovery slider of Lightroom worked its magic (at a setting of +39) - coupled with a negative 0.86 adjustment to the Exposure slider. My original camera setting was zero exposure compensation; it looks like it should have been negative 2/3 or negative 1.
__________________
Chuck PSE6/CS3/LR2/WinXP/Canon 450D, G10/Panasonic LX3 |
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#10
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Yeah Chuck, on my cameras red always blows out. Had the same experience shooting Hibiscus as you did. The only way I was able to match the reds was to use -2/3 compensation in the camera.
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| exposure adjustment, reds |
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