Yes .. back in the past, but I can't see any advantage over the technique that I've refined over time.Have you experimented with shooting RAW only in single shot mode rather than 3/AEB?
Yes .. back in the past, but I can't see any advantage over the technique that I've refined over time.Have you experimented with shooting RAW only in single shot mode rather than 3/AEB?
As long as you touch the boat, you'll be okay -- the exposure stays set until you touch again, so it should still be right for the boat even if it's moved.That's fine if the boat is just floating there, but rather tricky for a moving subject.
No, you obviously don't need too. you are getting great results from the original JPGs.Yes .. back in the past, but I can't see any advantage over the technique that I've refined over time.
If it does that, then at least you can be sure you're capturing all the available detail, so you can just lighten until the lightest gray turns white, and the detail should be preserved.Plus, spot metering on white will tend to turn it gray!
When tracking and composing with a fast moving subject, there's no time to take hands off the joysticks.As long as you touch the boat, you'll be okay -- the exposure stays set until you touch again, so it should still be right for the boat even if it's moved.
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