| Sounds like ISO is way too high.......I usually shoot at 200 or 400 ESP in daylight -------Original Message-------
Hi John, Question 1: Did you shoot in RAW or jpeg? It is possible to save at least some of the pic's if shot in RAW. Question 2: What setting did you use, M, Av, Tv, P....? Otherwise I'd take it as a learning experience, albeit an expensive one... I read not too long ago about a professional photographer that had rented equipment and props for a whole days photo shoot. He took hundreds of photo's during the day. He thought, when he was downloading them, that they downloaded very fast. Turns out he had set his camera to JPEG/small instead of RAW. A whole days shooting gone to waist. Lesson learned: Always, always, always, check your camera settings beforehand. This gives you an opportunity to go out and shoot the pictures again. ;-) Goran N From: "pgrampsnan@yahoo.co.uk" <pgrampsnan@yahoo.co.uk> To: photoshop-beginners@yahoogroups.com Sent: Thursday, July 5, 2012 12:57 PM Subject: [photoshop-beginners] ISO Hi People from a very rainy UK,I am at an age where I cannot remember things from day to day. I set my ISO to 2000 for some reason(do not know why)and forgot to turn it down again after I had finished what I was doing(I must have read something in one of my monthly Photographic Magazines)I have a lot of Photos that I have taken on my Camera,a Canon 5DII,that are very bright and I wondered if there was a way to make them look normal. The photos are of the coast line at Weston super Mare in Somerset. Can somebody please help me.Thankyou BigJohn in Lyneham UK | ||
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