Warp wrote:
> Thorsten Froehlich <tho### [at] trf de> wrote:
>
>>Get over it and fix your scenes!
>
>
> This is an incorrect solution.
>
> Have you ever heard of film exposure times and overexposures?
> Overexposure is not always a mistake in photography, nor is it in
> raytracing either.
>
> Here's an example of intentional overexposure in a photograph:
> http://www.students.tut.fi/~warp/photos/patikka2/35.jpg
> If the shutter speed of the camera would have been set so that the
> brightest part of the image (in this case the Sun) would have the
> maximum intensity the camera could measure, then everything in the
> photograph except the Sun would be almost completely black. Letting
> the Sun overexpose the photograph was completely intentional and
> in fact gives a good photographical effect.
>
> The photo also gives a hint about the truely correct solution to
> the problem.
I suspect that the colour bleeding around the sun
in this photo is caused by inperfections in the
camera lens.
One has "correct exposure" when the film has the
desired densities for certain object(s)/area(s).
Many automatic exposure systems tries to achieve a
certain density on the film for objects with
"medium tones".
--
Tor Olav
http://subcube.net
http://subcube.com
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