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And, the colourful side.

 

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The Garden Car.

 

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Edge of the Storm, Capital Reef National Park, Torrey Utah

M10-R & 35 FLE

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Leica M10R & Apo-Summicron-M 1:2/75 ASPH .

MY FAMILY ARRIVING FOR SUPPER

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Omikuji (fortunes) and detail at a shrine

M10R BP + 50 Summilux ASPH

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Leica M10R & Super-Elmar-M 1:3.4/21 ASPH.

Perth mid day 

 

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Leica M10R & Super-Elmar-M 1:3.4/21 ASPH.

Perth mid day 

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Mallow . . . 35mm APO at close focus setting.

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village festival in Portugal, Cron 50mm

 

 

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I was walking home last night after attending an outdoor music concert and my camera was still set for the stage lighting. When I came to my neighbor's house and saw his Samoyed at the gate I took two shots, then realized I'd forgotten to change the exposure settings on my camera. When I first opened this, the image was so dark I couldn't even tell what it was. The lights on the fence were the only things visible. Even so, I was able to pull the exposure up enough to make a perfectly acceptable image. The exposure latitude of this camera is amazing.

50 APO Summicron

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16 hours ago, fotografr said:

I was walking home last night after attending an outdoor music concert and my camera was still set for the stage lighting. When I came to my neighbor's house and saw his Samoyed at the gate I took two shots, then realized I'd forgotten to change the exposure settings on my camera. When I first opened this, the image was so dark I couldn't even tell what it was. The lights on the fence were the only things visible. Even so, I was able to pull the exposure up enough to make a perfectly acceptable image. The exposure latitude of this camera is amazing.

50 APO Summicron

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Very dark. The dog even is not overexposed. My Sony 6500 has the measuring method "highlight". That would take either the dog or or the lights of the fence as the lightest area to be exposed correctly. With sensors the lightest area is the critical one. Of course if this area is not important, it is the wrong method.

What would an iPhone do ......

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5 hours ago, jankap said:

My Sony 6500 has the measuring method "highlight". That would take either the dog or or the lights of the fence as the lightest area to be exposed correctly. With sensors the lightest area is the critical one. 

 

That sounds like an excellent feature. Unfortunately, it's probably far beyond what the M metering system is capable of in my M10R. In this case I didn't even meter. My aperture was set manually at f/2 and my shutter speed was set manually at 1/60th. The ISO was set at 3200. If any of those had been set on auto, I would have gotten a much better exposure. I had to dodge the dog quite a bit to get her coat to look white. 

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4 minutes ago, fotografr said:

That sounds like an excellent feature. Unfortunately, it's probably far beyond what the M metering system is capable of in my M10R. In this case I didn't even meter. My aperture was set manually at f/2 and my shutter speed was set manually at 1/60th. The ISO was set at 3200. If any of those had been set on auto, I would have gotten a much better exposure. I had to dodge the dog quite a bit to get her coat to look white. 

HCB made nice pictures too. Without electronics!

By the way, your picture is ok.

Edited by jankap
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10 hours ago, fotografr said:

I can remember shooting that way. For my first 10 years in photography everything was manual. 

Me too. Since I use navigation apps for travels I cannot find my way anymore without it, my brains have become lazy. My nightshots with the M10-R on Auto are often much too clear, which is not how the human eye sees the scene. It would be better to work with my M4 more often so that I can judge the scene with my brains again. 

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