V1.02
Thom Hogan’s Complete Guide to the Nikon D300
Page 664
• Check that you haven’t overridden any settings
. Check
especially for exposure compensation, bracketing, ISO
value, frame rate, and image quality and size settings.
• Take one more careful look at the top LCD, and pull up
the INFO display on the color LCD
. This is a redundancy
check for all three previous checks. After checking the
values on these displays, partially press the shutter release
(sometimes this triggers blinking of an icon, which may
remind you that you set something you need to restore).
Settings You Change Rarely (and then only for a reason)
•
Set a shooting method
. Single frame or one of the
Continuous release options are the primary choices. But
you might also set the self timer, Live View, or
M
UP
for
certain circumstances.
•
Set focus options
. Single Servo (AF-S) or Continuous Servo
(AF-C), plus Single Point, Dynamic Area, and Auto Area
are your primary choices. Unless you have a reason to
choose otherwise, Single Servo and Auto Area is the usual
choice.
•
Set a metering method
. Matrix, center-weight, or spot
meter are the choices. Matrix is your usual choice. Get in
the habit of looking at the indicator often; it’s
conveniently right next to the viewfinder, so a quick
glance at it before you put your eye to the camera is
simple to do.
•
Set ISO sensitivity
. Use the lowest numbered ISO that
gives you acceptable shutter speeds. If you’re in a low
contrast situation, you can consider ISO
LO 1.0
.
•
Set an exposure mode
. Avoid Program exposure mode if
you can, especially with flash. Aperture-priority is my
usual choice.
•
Set a flash mode
. This one’s a little tricky. The external
flash mode (TTL, Automatic, Manual, etc.) is controlled
with the
MODE
button on the flash. The internal flash
mode is controlled by Custom Setting #E3 (see page
<563>). If you’ve set TTL, the
type
of TTL performed