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10/24/2002 08:33:00 PM · #1 |
I bought a D60 and the automatic modes portrait landscape etc. create very dark images and sometimes blurry even if the speed was 1/60 or faster, anybody run into unusually dark images even with flash on the 60? or have any blurring issues? thanks a bunch <thinking of taking it back> i am using it with a canon28-80MM lens says AF/MF..maybe wrong lens type heck i dunno..thanks |
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10/25/2002 01:41:19 AM · #2 |
check your settings, if your ev or your flash is turned down/up, or your camera is set for the wrong lens that could be the problem. otherwise i RARELY ever use an auto mode with such a great camera as the EOS Digitals. also check your ISO speed as well. what is the apeture for your lens you are using? by blurry do you mean out of focus, or as in blurred from motion? check the values when you shoot and tell us. also, the censors for the auto modes for lighing are very different for different situations. what are your shooting conditions? what are the exact auto modes? well, good luck |
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10/25/2002 01:51:11 AM · #3 |
sorry - have no clue what might be wrong - don't think it's the lens (af/mf is the auto/manual focus switch) - if it was the wrong type, it wouldn't fit on the camera
question - when the shutter speed in 1/60 or faster, does it sound fast? compared to, say, 1/8 or 1/4?
question - does it behave the same at higher ISO settings?
question - you don't mention the creative zone settings - does the camera operate properly in those modes?
question - is the af/mf switch on the lens set to MF? if you're expecting auto-focus, it should be pushed forward to AF - otherwise you'll get that blurring
question - if you use the flash and there's a lens hood on the camera, the hood can block the flash, causing a dark exposure -- you're not doing that are you?
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other than that, i'd take it to a reputable camera shop - not some mall 1-hr foto place - someone who knows Canon equipment - see if he can make any recommendations
good luck !!
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10/25/2002 08:50:01 AM · #4 |
Originally posted by a1leyez0nm3: check your settings, if your ev or your flash is turned down/up, or your camera is set for the wrong lens that could be the problem. otherwise i RARELY ever use an auto mode with such a great camera as the EOS Digitals. also check your ISO speed as well. what is the apeture for your lens you are using? by blurry do you mean out of focus, or as in blurred from motion? check the values when you shoot and tell us. also, the censors for the auto modes for lighing are very different for different situations. what are your shooting conditions? what are the exact auto modes? well, good luck
here is an image and the settings
File Name 150-5041_IMG.JPG Camera Model Name Canon EOS D60 Shooting Date/Time 10/22/2002 6:43:40 AM Shooting Mode Portrait Tv( Shutter Speed ) 1/60 Av( Aperture Value ) 5.6 Metering Mode Evaluative Exposure Compensation 0 ISO Speed 100 Lens 28.0 - 80.0mm Focal Length 80.0mm Image Size 3072x2048 Image Quality Fine Flash On Flash Type External E-TTL Flash Exposure Compensation 0 Red-eye Reduction On Shutter curtain sync 1st-curtain sync White Balance Auto AF Mode One-Shot AF Active AF Points [ Center ] Parameters Contrast Normal Sharpness Normal Color saturation Normal Color tone Normal File Size 1610KB File Number 150-5041 Custom Function Settings 02:Shutter button/AE lock button 0:AF/AE lock 03:Mirror lockup 0:Disable 04:TV,AV and exposure level 0:1/2-stop 05:AF-assist beam/Flash firing 0:Emits/Fires 06:Shutter speed in Av mode 0:Auto 07:AEB sequence/auto cancellation 0:0 => - => +/Enabled 08:Shutter curtain sync 0:1st-curtain sync 09:Lens AF stop button Fn, switch 0:AF stop 10:Auto reduction of fill flash 0:Enable 11:Menu button return position 0:top 12:SET button func, when shooting 0:Default 13:Sensor cleaning 0:Disable 14:Superimposed display 0:On 15:Shutter release without CF card 0:Possible without CF card Drive Mode Continuous shooting Owner's Name Camera Body No. 0820502855 sample image
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* This message has been edited by the author on 10/25/2002 8:49:39 AM. |
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10/25/2002 09:02:11 AM · #5 |
and the second image on this page sample images File Name evsun.JPG Camera Model Name Canon EOS D60 Shooting Date/Time 1/1/1980 12:04:53 AM Shooting Mode Aperture-Priority AE Tv( Shutter Speed ) 1/350 Av( Aperture Value ) 4.0 Metering Mode Center-weighted averaging Exposure Compensation 0 ISO Speed 100 Lens 28.0 - 80.0mm Focal Length 46.0mm Image Size 3072x2048 Image Quality Fine Flash Off White Balance Auto AF Mode One-Shot AF Active AF Points [ Center ] Parameters Contrast Normal Sharpness High Color saturation High Color tone 2 File Size 1816KB File Number 151-5135 Custom Function Settings 02:Shutter button/AE lock button 0:AF/AE lock 03:Mirror lockup 0:Disable 04:TV,AV and exposure level 0:1/2-stop 05:AF-assist beam/Flash firing 0:Emits/Fires 06:Shutter speed in Av mode 0:Auto 07:AEB sequence/auto cancellation 0:0 => - => +/Enabled 08:Shutter curtain sync 0:1st-curtain sync 09:Lens AF stop button Fn, switch 0:AF stop 10:Auto reduction of fill flash 0:Enable 11:Menu button return position 0:top 12:SET button func, when shooting 0:Default 13:Sensor cleaning 0:Disable 14:Superimposed display 0:On 15:Shutter release without CF card 0:Possible without CF card Drive Mode Single-frame shooting Owner's Name Camera Body No. 0820502855
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10/25/2002 09:27:03 AM · #6 |
I'm not trying to be funny, but what are you feeling is wrong with these ?
Have you applied any post-processing at all (sharpening after resizing etc)
Was it using the on camera flash ? The first one looks like it should have had the exposure compensation adjusted, as what I expect are white tiles have been well exposed as mid-grey.
The second one in the sunlight looks perfectly well lit to me.
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10/25/2002 09:47:34 AM · #7 |
I'm with Gordo. These particular pics look just fine.
I'm thinking you might have a monitor calibration issue if these are looking too dark for you :).
I pulled both of them into photoshop to look at the histograms. the second one is pretty much a spot on exposure.
the first was a little underexposed but very even and with a simple levels adjustment made perfect, as you can see here:
little girl
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10/25/2002 10:12:37 AM · #8 |
okay thanks, i guess i'll keep the camera it works great in the studio just the portrait non-creative modes seem to be difficult thank you VERY much to all who responded and who looked at the pics you guys are awesome I feel i should be paying you guys :-)
* This message has been edited by the author on 10/25/2002 10:11:23 AM. |
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10/25/2002 10:53:12 AM · #9 |
practice practice practice : )
Originally posted by rll07: okay thanks, i guess i'll keep the camera it works great in the studio just the portrait non-creative modes seem to be difficult thank you VERY much to all who responded and who looked at the pics you guys are awesome I feel i should be paying you guys :-)
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