Exposure compensation, Exposure compensation -93 – Nikon Camera N90 User Manual

Page 138

Attention! The text in this document has been recognized automatically. To view the original document, you can use the "Original mode".

Advertising
background image

EXPOSURE COMPENSATION

Exposure compensation is a photographic technique that

enables you to vary the final exposure settings from those

measured by the camera’s light meter. Nikon’s 3D Matrix
Metering empioys methods of exposure calculation that

automatically apply exposure compensation, depending upon
scene brightness and contrast. As a result, your subject,

whether it is centered in the viewfinder or not, is given
corrected exposure in most lighting situations.

We do not recommend using any manually or automatically

applied exposure compensation when using Matrix Metering. If

you identify an extreme condition under which Matrix may have

some difficulty, such as a severely backlit scene or one with
extremes of contrast, we recommend using your camera’s
other built-in meters, Center-Weighted or Spot. Ultimately, only

you know what the subject or a part of it requires in terms of

exposure measurement. That’s why the N90 camera
incorporates three meters plus a variety of exposure

compensation systems. The photographer’s creativity is always
the final deciding and controlling factor. To use the various
exposure compensation functions, please refer to the following.

• Using AE-L (Auto Exposure Lock) lever (pp. 88-89)
• To obtain meter reading for a particular subject in Manual

exposure mode (pp. 90-91)

• Using exposure compensation button (pp. 92-93)
• All Mode Exposure Bracketing (MF-26 users only) (see MF-26

instruction manual)

Results will vary, depending on conditions, so you will want to

experiment with each method.

Advertising