Dave, thank you for the link. very helpful because I am trying to learn how to do it in post-processing, too.
Kaye, yes that's some discussion and they still have not answered my question, so I am going to try once more. PS Thank you, and I will try a square crop.
Colin I would really like to learn how to take a high key photo with a white bird. I do believe I can do it, have done it with dark birds using spot metering and exposing to the right which blows the highlights in the sky and moves the shadows and the midtones along the histogram.
I am struggling with the idea of blowing the highlights on a white bird as it seems like the wrong thing to do... ?
There is a beautiful back-lit high key white egret in the Secrets of Digital Bird Photography. Is this one way for me to try to capture a high key white bird, backlit, spot metered, and possibly flash? If not, how might I do this? By checking my histogram and exposing to blow certain colour channels (highlights only) and if yes, which colour channel do I choose... Say blue or green so I don't effect the orange bill of a swan?
Fig. 6.4.2 : Polar bear in a snow storm (or maybe it’s a snowy egret in blinding
backlight?). This is another example of a “high-key” image, which some people
like and some don’t. Evaluative/matrix metering would probably (depending on
the camera model) try to render this whole image in a neutral gray, and although
you could adjust the brightness upwards in postprocess to achieve the high-key
effect, you can get lower noise and more detail by exposing for high-key at the outset.
(1/320 sec, f/8, ISO 1250, 600mm, manual mode, TTL flash at +1 FEC).
http://www.digitalbirdphotography.com/6.4.html
Aside... My ultimate Nikon SLR handbook volume 2 October 2013 page 120 states that I have a back-lit mode in my Nikon 7100 (I have yet to try and find it, but will do) and says that this High Key mode...
is good for light-tone objects, producing light airy pictures but without overexposing the highlights...
From your conversation with Mike, I'm thinking this is incorrect?
Thank you.