I seem to be having issues blowing out the sky more often that I'd like. Any tips or tricks?
Should I meter of the sky and then recompose? I am practicing but looking for any guidance.
e02937 Goldmember 2,714 posts Joined Dec 2008 More info | Nov 19, 2009 10:01 | #1 I seem to be having issues blowing out the sky more often that I'd like. Any tips or tricks? Canon 7d
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tomjd Senior Member 569 posts Joined May 2008 Location: NW Indiana More info | Nov 19, 2009 10:11 | #2 I'm certainly no expert, but are you shooting raw? It amazed me how well you can recover a blown out sky once I started shooting raw. The sky in the shot below was completely blow out right out of the camera, but just by cranking the "recovery" and playing with the "high" levels in PS, I was able to get it to this without a whole lot of effort. (click image for larger)
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Nov 19, 2009 10:13 | #3 I do shoot raw, I've had some success recovering in post but I'm trying to figure out what I'm supposed to doing differently Canon 7d
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golfecho (I will regret that) More info |
egordon99 Cream of the Crop 10,247 posts Likes: 3 Joined Feb 2008 Location: Philly 'burbs More info | Nov 19, 2009 11:00 | #5 merlin2375 wrote in post #9043487 I do shoot raw, I've had some success recovering in post but I'm trying to figure out what I'm supposed to doing differently If the sky is blown out, reduce your exposure. This may cause the rest of the picture to be underexposed though
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tdodd Goldmember 3,733 posts Likes: 3 Joined Jun 2006 Location: Essex, UK More info | Nov 19, 2009 11:14 | #6 If the highlights in the sky are important to you then spot meter off the brightest area of importance and set an exposure that puts that area at +3 stops on the meter. This is a technique I often use when the sky is important, such as when shooting BIF. Check for blinkies on your LCD to see whether you have any clipping and how much. Shoot with neutral picture style so as not to create false clipping warnings. It will do no harm to go over a little, as you can pull that back in post. If that causes your foreground to be too dark then you'll have to tackle that separately in post. Either that or use some sort of graduated or split filter to tone down the sky, or shoot HDR and combine exposures.
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PhotosGuy Cream of the Crop, R.I.P. More info | Nov 19, 2009 22:50 | #7 There's no easy answer. Sometimes I expose for the most important thing in the shot: Expose (to the) Right FrankC - 20D, RAW, Manual everything...
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KarlJohnston Cream of the Crop 9,334 posts Likes: 5 Joined Jul 2008 More info | Nov 19, 2009 23:04 | #8 Permanent banGet a GND filter. Adventurous Photographer, Writer
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ToddLambert I don't like titles More info | Nov 19, 2009 23:17 | #9 Yeah, exactly. Your options for situations like this are: underexpose the ground or overexpose the sky. To alleviate this, you can either bracket your shot, use a CPL, or a GND.
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neilwood32 Cream of the Crop 6,231 posts Likes: 5 Joined Sep 2007 Location: Sitting atop the castle, Edinburgh, Scotland More info | Nov 20, 2009 07:38 | #10 I would always side with Expose for the sky. Having a camera makes you no more a photographer than having a hammer and some nails makes you a carpenter - Claude Adams
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golfecho (I will regret that) More info | Nov 20, 2009 08:04 | #11 neilwood32 wrote in post #9049480 Bracketting - my preferred option (after the CPL). It then becomes very easy to stack the 2 together in PP and bring out the detail by way of masks and selections. And ALWAYS shoot RAW - it gives a huge amount of headroom in PP! If you hold the bracketed exposures perfectly still (tripod), you can always explore HDR as well.
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