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SUMMER SCENES
SUNSET
MIDDAY SUN
http://www.digitalcameraworld.com AUGUST 2019 DIGITAL CAMERA^43
THE SUNNY 16 RULE
The ‘Sunny 16’ rule is a way to meter for a correct exposure during the middle of the
day without using your camera’s light meter. The idea is that, in daylight at an aperture
of f/16, the correct exposure can be achieved with a reciprocal shutter speed to the
ISO speed you’re using. For example, ISO 200 would require 1/200 sec. If the
conditions change, you just change the aperture, too.
EXPLAINED: KELVIN SCALE
The colour temperature of light hitting your camera sensor
will constantly change, both throughout the day and under
different cloud conditions. This is something to bear in
mind, especially when setting your white balance manually.
3 Low-angle sunsets
Around an hour before official sunset (the time that’s given on
weather apps) clear scenes suddenly appear bathed in golden
light. The colour temperature of this light is often even warmer
than at sunrise, as it’s scattered and diffused by a thicker
atmosphere. However, a low setting sun shining directly
into your lens can throw off the metering system completely
to give silhouettes or falsely bright results.
If this is the case, you could shoot bracketed exposures and
combine different exposures together in post-processing for a more
balanced scene. Alternatively, use the histogram to help you choose
the exposure settings, so that you capture as wide a tonal range as
possible. Provided you’re shooting in Raw mode, you’ll then be able
to bring back plenty of the tonal information back when editing.
2 Midday sun
In summer, the sun rises high
and fast in the sky. As morning
shadows quickly retreat, any
sense of depth in a landscape
is diminished. Contrast is also
a challenge for getting accurate
exposure – in Evaluative
metering mode, the camera
meter measures light intensity
across the whole frame to come
up with an average value, often
rendering your actual subject
too bright or too dark.
Switch to Spot metering
mode, take several readings
from points around the frame,
then shoot with the average
settings. You can then use the
histogram to check for clipping
of highlights and shadows.
The Auto White Balance
setting continuously adjusts
the camera’s colour temperature
over a range between
approximately 3,000 and 7,000K.
The white balance presets offer
a shortcut to specific settings
in the same restricted range.
Presets
Colour temperature
Light sources (Kelvins)
Sunrise/sunset
Flame
Light bulb
Midday sun
Overcast sky
Electronic flash
Clear blue sky
Shade on a
clear day
Shady: 7,000K
Cloudy: 6,000K
Flash: 5,900K
Daylight: 5,200K
Tungsten: 3,200K
White fluorescent: 4,000K