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I product an image where there is a lot of light, so the image appear dark. and other where there less light, its apear white.

2007-03-23 15:16:48 · 5 answers · asked by kuai g 1 in Arts & Humanities Visual Arts Photography

5 answers

Over exposed means you've blown out your highlights – there's no detail.....too much light. Under exposed is the opposite – no detail in your shadows.....not enough light (too dark). You could dodge and burn the appropriate areas in a dark room if your sneaky.

2007-03-23 15:41:04 · answer #1 · answered by gdesigner 2 · 0 0

When it's too dark, it's called "under-exposure" and when it's too light "over-exposure." You may also hear people say their photos are "burnt out" if they are overexposed.

Both of these conditions result from incorrect "metering"--when the camera senses the ammount of light in a given situation. If you have an automatic point-and shoot of film or digital, you need to press the shutter button halfway down to meter and focus on the part you want in good light. Or using flash when outdoor shadows exist. With manual-adjustabel film or digital cameras you can manually meter by adjusting "shutter speed" (how fast the lens opens and closes) and "aperature" (how big it opens). Using a smaller aperature (aka high "f-stop") or a faster shutter speed (slow is 1/60, fast goes from 1/200 to 1/8000 of a second) will darken burnt out scenes, whereas the opposite will lighten (slow shutter and/or bigger aperature

2007-03-24 02:04:44 · answer #2 · answered by soccertrackdramastar 2 · 0 0

Over-exposed means that the photo is too dark, and under-exposed means the photo is too light. Also called over developed and under developed.

2007-03-23 22:20:49 · answer #3 · answered by Sarah 3 · 0 0

over exposed is too much light, under is too dark - this can be remedied sometimes with filters and dodging in a dark room

2007-03-23 22:19:54 · answer #4 · answered by Shopaholic Chick 6 · 0 0

underdeveloped and overdeveloped.

2007-03-23 22:19:29 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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