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ExposureCompensation
Exposure Compensation Guide
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Master exposure compensation techniques to override camera metering and achieve correct exposure in challenging lighting conditions.
Características Principales
EV (exposure value) compensation scale explanation
Negative compensation for bright scenes (backlit, snow, beaches)
Positive compensation for dark scenes (dark subjects, shadows)
Metering mode interaction with exposure compensation
When to use spot metering versus matrix metering
Practical examples for different lighting scenarios
How to Use Exposure Compensation
Understand the Problem
Identify if your camera is overexposing (too bright) or underexposing (too dark)
Check Your Meter
Use your camera's exposure meter in the viewfinder to assess current exposure
Apply Compensation
Use +EV to brighten (underexposed scenes) or -EV to darken (overexposed scenes)
Adjust Incrementally
Make ±0.3 to ±0.7 EV adjustments and review the results
Check Histogram
Review the histogram to verify proper exposure distribution
Fine-Tune
Make additional adjustments as needed for optimal results
Casos de Uso
Snow and beach photography preventing overexposure of bright scenes
Backlit subject photography balancing foreground and background
Dark subject photography ensuring proper exposure of darker tones
Creative exposure adjustments for artistic effects
Preguntas Frecuentes
What does +1 EV mean?
Plus one EV means doubling the amount of light reaching the sensor, brightening the image by one stop.
When should I use negative compensation?
Use negative compensation for bright scenes (snow, beach, bright white subjects) that fool the meter into underexposure.
How is exposure compensation different from manual mode?
Compensation adjusts the metered exposure automatically; manual mode gives you full control but requires manual adjustment.
Can I fix exposure in post-processing?
Yes, but getting exposure right in-camera preserves image quality and detail better than aggressive post-processing.
What's the typical compensation range?
Most cameras offer ±3 to ±5 EV compensation, with 0.3 or 0.5 EV increments.