a histogram is a histogram is a histogram. the histogram doesn't know the light came from a flash. the histogram functions exactly the same. judging exposure with the histogram is totally the same with or without flash. Whether it is flash, the sun, strobes or moonlight, the histogram graphs the quantity of light at any given EV and that's pretty much that. You push as far right as you want and that's the ball game. that's what I think today. :)


Hi!

On Sun, 24 Oct 2004 10:12:16 -0600, Schlake (William Colburn)
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

those in M mode and use the histogram to determine proper exposure.

I noticed that it's a little bit different to judge flash exposure from histogram than it is to judge available light exposure. Specially, if the photo is taken in dark conditions. I do not have that much experience from digital flash photography... but I think there is a difference. What do you think?

-- Bud Kuenzli

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