DougPaul
Well-known member
Proper exposure can be difficult--ideally one should use the maximum exposure that just barely misses saturating ("blowing out", over exposing) the brightest pixel. But what if there is a very small very bright object? Then the main part will be underexposed, so under certain situations, saturating a few pixels may give the best overall effect. In difficult situations, you need to take the picture in order to find the exposure setting necessary to take the picture... (This is where raw image formats are helpful--they have a greater dynamic range than JPEG so one has a better chance of setting the effective exposure correctly in postprocessing.) Practical cameras use much simpler schemes to estimate the exposure and may make poor choices and no automatic procedure can read the photographer's mind to incorporate the artistic judgements. Many digital cameras can display a histogram of the pixel brightnesses which can help you to judge the exposure of a pic that you have just taken. See http://www.luminous-landscape.com/tutorials/understanding-series/understanding-histograms.shtml for more info on histograms.7summits said:But then if the camera is doing the right thing, pictures shouldn't be underexposed, after all I did use the Snow mode for snow scene. I'll try again this weekend, using both Manual and Snow mode, and overexpose the pictures. Also avoid using wide angle to reduce the vignetting effect.
The trade-off between automatic mode groupings and control... There is a table in my Canon A75 manual that shows what the mode settings do, perhaps also in your SD600 manual. I would guess that it would assume that snow scenes are relatively bright and tend to choose a fairly low ISO setting if possible.Doug, the Snow mode do not allow manual ISO setting.
I was comparing to DSLRs... In general most P&S camera designs trade-off image quality and control for small size and lower cost. Most have fairly small image sensors which tends to increase the quantum noise in the images. (Some DSLRs have a full 35mm film sized sensor.)Hmmm... for a point and shot, I actually think Canon SD series are not cheap.
The color shift and increased blue noise towards the sides of the image is somewhat puzzling to me. Vignetting is a function of how far off-center the pixel is (ie left-right and vertical), not just left-right which suggests that it is not the underlying cause of the problem. Most optical (lens) problems would not cause this pattern of changes--my guess is that it is more likely to be sensor and/or shutter related. I would have to know more about the detailed construction of the image sensor to hazard a guess whether it might have a problem. It is also possible that the raw-to-image conversion algorithm changes somewhat as a function of left-to-right position on the sensor to compensate for something and is mismatched to the problem giving the net blue-red-blue cast that we are observing. (If so, the problem might be inherent in the design, but might show more in some units than others.)
Doug
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