172
If you encounter problems
11
App
end
ix
The picture is too bright.
There was something dark
in the center of the image.
When there is something dark in the center of the
image, the edges of the image will be brighter
regardless of the metering system. Adjust the
exposure toward minus (-).
P. 79
The ISO setting is high.
Set ISO to auto or 100. If there is no
improvement, use a commercially available ND
filter compatible with the lens.
P. 82
A low aperture value is set
in the A (M) mode.
Increase the aperture value.
P. 41,
P. 45
A slow shutter speed is
set in the S (M) mode.
Increase the shutter speed.
P. 43,
P. 45
The picture is too dark.
The subject was too small
and was backlit.
Set the metering system to spot metering. Or use
the flash.
P. 50
P. 77
There was something
bright in the center of the
image.
When there is something bright in the center of
the image, the whole image will be darker
regardless of the metering system. Adjust the
exposure toward plus (+).
P. 79
A high aperture value is
set in the A (M) mode.
Decrease the aperture value.
P. 41,
P. 45
A fast shutter speed is set
in the S (M) mode.
Reduce the shutter speed.
P. 43,
P. 45
The colors of pictures taken indoors look unnatural.
Indoor lighting affected the
picture's colors.
Set the appropriate white balance for the lighting.
More natural-looking colors can be reproduced
with the one-touch white balance.
P. 90
The white balance setting
is wrong.
Set the appropriate white balance for the lighting
again.
P. 87
Halation produces unnatural colors in the picture.
This may be caused by
excessively bright
ultraviolet light on the
subject, such as sunlight
shining through the leaves
of trees, brightly lit
windows at night,
reflections off metal in
direct sunlight, etc.
• Use a commercially available UV filter. As this
may upset the overall color balance, it should
only be used under the conditions described on
the left.
• Process the picture using a graphics application
that supports JPEG (Paint Shop Pro,
Photoshop, etc.). For example, after picking up
unnatural colors with an eyedropper tool, etc.,
you can select color areas, and try color
conversion or saturation adjustment. For
details, refer to the manual for the graphics
application you are using.
–
Possible cause
Corrective action
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s0004_e_Advanced.book Page 172 Tuesday, September 27, 2005 4:15 PM