If you don't occasionally chimp for exposure settings (overall & R G B), you're a lot better photographer then I am.
Kenneth Waller http://www.tinyurl.com/272u2f ----- Original Message ----- From: "ann sanfedele" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Subject: Re: A question about chimping > Tom C wrote: > >>>>, and to get it right one must see. >>>> >>>> >>>Or one must have enough confidence in their knowledge and abilities..... >>> >>> >> >>Certainly, one would have confidence.... but that confidence does not >>negate human error or the fact that the camera itself is not a perfect >>device. The ability to see a captured image immediately after exposure, >>is to a photographer, probably the single largest advantage offered by the >>technology. >> >>Tom C. >> >> >> >> > I can only get a hint of what Ive done from the tiny photo.. although it > is sufficient to trash the really obvious > out of focus, super camera shake, subject out of frame stuff.. ... LIke > Robb, I need to look at them on the > big screen to really tell what I've gotten. > > And using the button that zooms in on the camera really messed me up > once when I went to the next frame > to examine it after zooming in on one. I was photo'ing a little birdie > on a roof -- shot about 10 frames - > thought I had gotten it but all I was seeing on back of the camera was a > piece of the sky - cursing myself > and trashing a bunch I sudden realized I was only looking at a corner of > the frame. ugh. Probably didn't > have a decent shot anyway. sigh. > > ann -- PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List [email protected] http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly above and follow the directions.

