G
Guest
Guest
About Nikon underexposing, Canon overexposing, Olympus getting it "just" right and the amount of time to correct it in photoshop:
I suppose you used calibrated monitor. The exposure thing is a little bit subjective area, and I would be glad if people learned to use camera controls (in this case exposure compensation) to get their desired results. It's much quicker then Photoshop. ;-) (and you don't loose anything)
Colors, contrast etc. can also be tweaked in camera. I think this is the important information, not the Photoshop time.
And just a little curious about the noise level on nikon. Don't know your metodology of measuring it and can't say it's wrong - but could it be the ADR? (advanced dynamic range - if I'm not mistaken defaults to AUTO)
Happy user of compacts. ;-)
I suppose you used calibrated monitor. The exposure thing is a little bit subjective area, and I would be glad if people learned to use camera controls (in this case exposure compensation) to get their desired results. It's much quicker then Photoshop. ;-) (and you don't loose anything)
Colors, contrast etc. can also be tweaked in camera. I think this is the important information, not the Photoshop time.
And just a little curious about the noise level on nikon. Don't know your metodology of measuring it and can't say it's wrong - but could it be the ADR? (advanced dynamic range - if I'm not mistaken defaults to AUTO)
Happy user of compacts. ;-)