One Camera Setting & One Big Impact on Your Pictures

by Amanda Padgett on July 17, 2012

The following post is from Amanda of Everyday Elements:

source:amanda padgett

An Embarrassing Confession

The second weekend in June I went on a very special trip to Denver, Colorado, to a business retreat for mom-entrenuers, put on by MomBiz Retreat. They had asked me to be the “event photographer.” I was so honored and definitely felt up to the challenge.

The gear was packed and toted half-way across the country. I took the camera, lenses and flash with me to each session.  The pictures looked great when I viewed them in-camera on the LCD screen, and I was very pleased with my efforts.

Returned home and uploaded them to my Lightroom 4 and sat there confused.

Were these MY pictures? They were much darker than I remembered them being when I looked through my LCD screen. What in the world could have happened?

Diagnosing the Problem

After much contemplation, I decided to check something in my menu…...the LCD screen brightness. What did I find? That it was up almost as high as it could go. I found the culprit.

You may be wondering “didn’t she meter, like she instructs everyone else to do?” Normally I would have, but I was using flash for almost all the pictures, and so no metering took place. I started with my normal base settings for when I shoot with flash, then tweak the flash intensity until I have the exposure I want – based off the LCD SCREEN.

So, when the screen was showing me a nice, well lit image, I thought everything was good to go. But, oh how it wasn’t. I would say all of my images were underexposed by one to two stops.

If you shoot Canon, here is the menu on my Canon 50D

Ounce of Prevention Worth a Pound of Cure

I was able to fix the exposure of the images via Lightroom, but it cost me additional time in editing that I would have rather been doing something else. And, if you read my tutorial on noise, you will learn that when you underexpose and then later fix in post processing, you will have significant noise in the images. Sure enough, I had to tackle that when editing too.

Sad fact is that I remembered increasing the brightness about a week before, because I had been outside and was having a hard time seeing the screen. I did not take time to set it back when I put the camera away that day. It was one of those “I’ll take care of later” things that I never remembered, until AFTER it had wrecked havoc with other image.

Check your menu settings and make sure that  your LCD screen brightness is set to produce the correct level of exposure. It may not always be at the middle/zero mark. You might need to increase or decrease depending on your tastes, shooting style and your camera model (due to age, some screens may not be as bright as they once were).

Taking that a step further, I am writing down a series of small things to double check each time before I put away my camera so that it’s ready for the next time I pull it out to use. After going through the checklist a few times, I am sure it will become habit.

Do you have a pre-shoot checklist you go through to make sure problems like this don’t happen to you? If so, we’d love to hear it!

Amanda is a quirky, introverted mom of four who is passionate about helping others learn their cameras and editing software. She homeschools her four kids, ages 13 to 6, all of whom run away when they see her carrying her camera.

  • http://krissiwyss.wordpress.com Krissi

    That’s some good thinkin’! It’s so clear, now to strive to do those things. With a plan, I think it can def work! Thanks for a good post.

  • megan perkins

    Do you have a post that explains metering that you could point me to?

  • http://www.just1step.com Kara @ Just1Step

    Same thing happened to me recently, Amanda, when using my flash to take some indoor shots. I thought they looked great until I pulled them up on my computer, then found they were darker than I expected. I’ll have to check my LCD brightness – you may have found my solution for me. :)

  • Jenn

    I swear, you JUST described the exact same thing I did while shooting inside our local art musem, which prohibits flash! The noise was GHASTLY. They looked great in the dim galleries but when I downloaded…ugh, what a mess! My ISO was set low, but the underexposure completely killed any shot I had that was pleasing otherwise. Now, I just leave my LCD brightness set at the default for my camera. As a side note, if you do shoot outside a lot and want a way to see your LCD without ambient light, grab a Hoodman Loupe.

  • http://twitter.com/HomemakersDaily HomemakersDaily

    I am such a dummy when it comes to photography. I have a nice point and shoot that my daughter set up for me. I definitely need to learn but I haven’t had time. However, I did check my LCD screen settings and will keep an eye on that in the future. Thanks for the tip.

  • Gina Kleinworth

    Great advice! I almost always flub later if I don’t reset my settings to the “normal” spot & I always kick myself for not remembering. This is also a good reminder for those of us that use flash infrequently. I only pull mine out every so often & always forget that it changes what I see on my meter.

  • http://expandng.com/ lisacng

    Found you via Pinterest! My LCD brightness is always zeroed. I never thought to play with it according to my camera and computer and whatever preferences. I am just starting out tho! Tks!

  • TidyMom

    great tip Amanda, but that brings me to another question – so I have a terrible time shooting outside when it’s bright out and you can’t see your screen – so now I’m wondering, when would you adjust your LCD brightness, because wouldn’t it always produce false information like what happend to you?

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