Originally Posted by
Bettina
Hi Manfred,
Thanks so much for the answer. Yes, the fact that I feel my pictures are underexposed with both cameras and totally different lenses is a sign, to me, that it's not a question of the camera. And there are many different things that sort of play together, but are not the real core of the question... Or maybe it's just that I'm not managing to say what I mean. :-S
The thing is: I have been changing all my pictures to reduce the default brightness in photoshop and then compensate it by manually increasing the exposure. This procedure brings noise into my pictures, or at least it did with my Nikon. So that's why I don't really like doing it, but I still preferred that to the increased brightness (when you have 50% brightness, skyes get less blue, I feel backgrounds are more matte, there is less contrast overall).
After blaming my camera for these issues, I changed; and discovered that it wasn't a camera problem at all. That Photoshop default is +50 brightness for all raw. And THAT got me thinking: am I missing something? Is it actually a good thing to increase brightness by default? So it is a rather general question, really. I just started feeling silly for changing something I thought was clever and made pictures look better, and now I realize I might be totally in the wrong.
(As to my screen: no, it's not calibrated and I am aware of the implications; but it is not too far away, and I work with photos by professional photographers and can see those are usually lighter than my **raws with less than +50 brightness**.)
I am just really puzzled, that's all... And thanks for the photo-upload link. I'll check that out as well!