Sometimes we try to diagnose what we consider is a problem, never get to the bottom of it and wonder if we are missing something obvious. Perhaps it's just me but I would like to run this one through someone else as it's bugging me.
A few days ago Catalina posted an image which was a landscape consisting of 50% sky and 50% land and the posted image appeared on screen to be 'reasonably' exposed. By reasonable clipping could be removed by reducing exposure by -0.25 with a recovery of 60%.
The thread and image can be seen here A Cow
I looked at the Exif which is as follows;
Shooting Mode - PROGRAMMED AUTO
Aperture - f11
Speed - 1/500s
Exposure Compensation - -(minus) 4.7EV
Metering mode - Matrix
ISO - 400
What struck me was exposure compensation of -4.7 in programmed mode for a scene that I would have expected the camera to handle reasonably well. Following this I undertook some tests in the same mode, similar scene combination and came to the conclusion that if I had made a compensation of -4.7EV it would have produced a totally unusable result.
So the mystery was 'WHY' and 'HOW' the image posted was reasonable for which I came to two conclusions;
a) The camera was pointed at a very bright part of the sky when the metering system was locked at which time it also had the -4.7EV compensation set for some reason. The new scene was then framed, shutter operated and the image was luckily correct.
b) The posted image had not been corrected significantly due to severe underexposure because if blown up to 400% there is virtually no noise.
This is bugging me, what have I missed?
Grahame