gegjrphoto Posted August 24 Share Posted August 24 I don't understand the obsession iti avoid minor highlight overexposure. In most situations with widely varying backgrounds it is almost impossible to prevent having some areas overexposed. For example, when the main subject has a background of vegetation and sun is shining on the subject and on background, it is possible to have excellent exposure on the subject (foreground) without being able to control exposure of highlights coming through the vegetation. This can be especially true of landscape scenes or scenes where wildlife is in foreground but dense vegetation with speckles of sun coming through the vegetation in the background. Back in days of only film there was no histogram view and no lcd to see effects of various changes to exposure settings. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TrekRover Posted October 7 Share Posted October 7 I think most of this can be corrected in a program like Lightroom Classic and add masking layers to adjust the exposure highlights according to the person's desire. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Solution gegjrphoto Posted Thursday at 08:04 PM Author Solution Share Posted Thursday at 08:04 PM (edited) Yes I know and I've used Lightroom Classic ever since version 3. I don't mind minor dodging and burning and cropping and enlargement like could be done back in old days of the physical darkroom but I try to avoid digital manipulation as much as possible. Especially adding layers and alike such as you suggest. I attempt to get it as right as possible in the camera. Edited Thursday at 08:06 PM by gegjrphoto Added more response. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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