You can't do double exposures on any digital camera I know of. the reason is each time a photo is taken, a file is created and that file written to flash memory. The way computer memory is set up, even if you wrote the second file to exactly the same spot as the first file, all that would occur is that the second file would replace the first.
Remember, computers are binary in nature They LOVE the word OR. They understand 1 OR 0, Yes OR No, Picture #1 OR Picture #2.
As suggested before, the only reliable way to do a 'double exposure' digitally is with a photo editor.
2006-09-28 13:34:02
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answer #1
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answered by glenbarrington 7
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This is trivial to do in photoshop and you can get some nice blending effects in there and overlay the other photo exactly how you want it. A hell of alot easier doing it digitally than the old film method.
2006-09-30 18:31:35
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Try using photoshop, put each image in a layer and then set the opacity to 50% or whaever you want.
2006-09-28 17:52:54
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answer #3
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answered by Malik 7
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Glenn, my D200 can take multiple exposures in the camera. Up to TEN on one frame, if I want. I'm sure others can as well.
2006-10-01 00:33:39
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answer #4
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answered by Picture Taker 7
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