Originally Posted by
drjuice
Hi, Christina -
I'd suggest that you figure out your own process for learning how to manage things like this. When I start working with a camera, I go through the manual to learn where all the functions are accessed, a button, a slider, a clicker, whatever. Then I practice my process to learn how the new camera performs each of the functions. It's tedious, but I learned to do that with my first 35mm camera and it continues through my latest DSLR camera, a Sony alpha700.
I will give you a list of what I do which may give you some ideas about figuring out your own process. The first and most important thing is to start with your camera manual and see how it explains things for the particular issue of tone compensation (which is called other things depending on the camera and software other folks may be using). To avoid confusing people about tone compensation, I'm going to use setting ISO as an example.
Then, for figuring out a process,
Thank you for the information. I started to kind've do this but get excited about all the settings instead of slowing down & methodically learning 1 at a time.
So much to learn as a newbie photographer. I chose the flooring to start this. but haven't written about each pic to help keep track.
diane
1. I determine the number of settings involved if I just change the setting for the one thing I want to learn about. For my camera, I have ISO choices of AUTO plus 16 different explicit speeds.
2. Next, I make a list for each of the choices I want to experiment with, so in this case, I'd have a list with one item on each line specifying the speed. The reasons for the list are:
a. to check off each item as I take the photograph,
b. to note the image name - for the first image I take today, the image file identifier will be DSC08031.ARW
(ARW is Sony's file extension for its RAW format),
c. to have a place to note, in this example, the f-stop and exposure time for each image, and,
d. to have an organized way to note down my comments as I'm reviewing the images later.
3. I select a location I know really well for my sample images. Ideally, my preference is for a few large areas of fairly uniform color, some kinds of "regular" patterned areas, and some "natural" objects. Fortunately, just out my front door are the walls of other buildings, the roof tiles, and a large pine tree. So I can frame my image with almost the exact mix of those three kinds of objects.
4. I nearly always use a tripod, though once in a long while I'll use the balcony ledge if I want to get lots of sky in the image.
5. For ISO, I would specify auto-aperture and auto-shutter (because as the ISO changes, both the f-stop and the length time to record the exposure will change as the ISO changes, either up or down)
6. I focus the image and note the focus settings at the top of my list (I try NOT to change anything about the content of the image while I'm taking my test images because it's harder to think about the comparisons if I do, even accidentally).
7. I systematically go through making one exposure at each ISO setting. As I change the ISO setting, I check the F-stop and the exposure time on my list (on my camera, when I reset the ISO value, the camera will display both of these across the top of the LCD screen + the other "most important" settings that I leave at my personal default)
When I get all my test images taken, I head for the computer to see what everything looks like, again, noting things I see when I look at each of my images. Now, I know always to go from the very best quality to the very worst, so I can see how things degrade. But, the important point for beginners is to start with the first or last of their test images and progress step by step through all the others so it's possible to observe from one step to the next what changes.
CAUTION: When you're first getting started, you may not notice anything particular between two steps of your process, but DO NOT TOSS OUT ANY TEST IMAGES. With your notes and the test images, you can go back and revisit what you've done if you ever get confused about what works or doesn't for any particular settings.
This kind of process works for absolutely every function I've ever cared about knowing on any camera I've used from my first 35mm to a graflex that I got to use for three days back in November, 1963, to my present DSLR.
Absolutely feel free to work out your own process for learning about your camera based on what I've listed out here.
Hope this helps.
virginia