Are you letting the camera set the exposure or have you set the exposure manually?
My guess is the camera is setting the exposure (look at your EXIF data and I bet you'll see the info there). As the subjust comes closer, the darkness oh his clotes fills a greater percentage of the frame, and the camera "opens up" a bit to compensate for the greater amount of dark in the frame. Shel > [Original Message] > From: Kenneth Waller > In every case, you have photographed as subject comes closer to you. Do you > get the same effect as you photograph a series with the subject moving away? > > Kenneth Waller > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Jens Bladt" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > Subject: RE: ist D exposure question > > > >I have found, that when exposing many frames (5 shiot burst) the last > >frames > > will get overexposed. > > I don't know why. > > Perhaps the latest are the brightest (?) - and the camera was just set to > > underexpose from the start - so the last ones will be just about right? > > > > Look at these (the next shot is brighter than the previous one): > > http://www.flickr.com/photos/bladt/86419641/in/set-72057594048128913/ > > http://www.flickr.com/photos/bladt/86419776/in/set-72057594048128913/ > > http://www.flickr.com/photos/bladt/86419933/in/set-72057594048128913/

