Your page wouldn't come up. But in general, when shooting RAW you should expose to preserve your highlights right at the limit. When processing in the PSCS RAW converter, adjust the highlight level with exposure slider, then bring your midtones back up to where you want them with the brightness slider and adjust the black with the shadow slider. Don't expect a RAW to look good right out of the camera.
Paul
On Dec 29, 2005, at 4:33 AM, David Oswald wrote:

At http://users.adelphia.net/daoswald/ you can see a few shots I snapped today in Chinatown, Los Angeles. These were shot as RAW and coerced into jpegs after a little postprocessing. This was the first time I've taken exclusively RAW images. After initial RAW processing, I didn't re-touch them as jpegs, other than to size them down to web-friendly.

Notice the overly-bright sky, and underexposed subjects. I could adjust the midtones with the Levels tool, but I left them as-is to demonstrate my point.

The point here is that this seems to be an all too typical result with DSLR's, at least for me. I can pick and choose; either the subject is exposed properly (and the sky hopelessly burned out), or the sky is at least kept within gamut (though still a little bright) resulting in underexposed midtones.

Aside from underexposing EVERYTHING, and then postprocessing to pull out shadow detail, is there anything I can do in-camera to improve my exposures?

Please excuse the boring subjects; I was just snapping away to tinker with exposure, not really paying attention to finding the one great shot.

Dave


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