Owner's Manual
Table Of Contents
- Quick Start Guide
- Users Manual
- Q&A Index
- Table of Contents
- For Your Safety
- Notices
- Introduction
- Basic Photography and Playback
- Live View
- Recording and Viewing Movies
- P, S, A, and M Modes
- User Settings: U1 and U2 Modes
- Release Mode
- Image Recording Options
- Focus
- ISO Sensitivity
- Exposure/Bracketing
- White Balance
- Image Enhancement
- Flash Photography
- Other Shooting Options
- More on Playback
- Connections
- Menu Guide
- The Playback Menu: Managing Images
- The Shooting Menu: Shooting Options
- Custom Settings: Fine-Tuning Camera Settings
- Reset Custom Settings
- a: Autofocus
- b: Metering/Exposure
- c: Timers/AE Lock
- d: Shooting/Display
- d1: Beep
- d2: Viewfinder Grid Display
- d3: ISO Display and Adjustment
- d4: Viewfinder Warning Display
- d5: Screen Tips
- d6: CL Mode Shooting Speed
- d7: Max. Continuous Release
- d8: File Number Sequence
- d9: Information Display
- d10: LCD Illumination
- d11: Exposure Delay Mode
- d12: Flash Warning
- d13: MB-D11 Battery Type
- d14: Battery Order
- e: Bracketing/Flash
- f: Controls
- The Setup Menu: Camera Setup
- The Retouch Menu:Creating Retouched Copies
- My Menu/Recent Settings
- Technical Notes
- Scan of CD-ROM
- Warranty
167
I
A Playback Zoom
To zoom in on the photograph when the histogram is
displayed, press X.
Use the X and W buttons to zoom in
and out and scroll the image with the multi selector.
The
histogram will be updated to show only the data for the
portion of the image visible in the monitor.
A Histograms
Camera histograms are intended as a guide only and may differ from those displayed in
imaging applications.
Some sample histograms are shown below:
If the image contains objects with a wide range of
brightnesses, the distribution of tones will be relatively
even.
If the image is dark, tone distribution will be shifted to the
left.
If the image is bright, tone distribution will be shifted to
the right.
Increasing exposure compensation shifts the distribution of tones to the right, while
decreasing exposure compensation shifts the distribution to the left.
Histograms can
provide a rough idea of overall exposure when bright ambient lighting makes it difficult to
see photographs in the monitor.