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Folks I seem to have an annoying issue with my Pentax DSLR.. When I take low level light pictures either using flash or not the lighting in the pictures turn out great, but when I take daytime pictures outside and in the sunlight they seem to be VERY dim.. which then forces me to fix with Photoshop CS3 to make the pictures look nice and bright. I shoot only in RAW but it seems the camera it's self is not taking advantage of the natural light of the sun!! What am I doing wrong here?? Are filter's a MUST?

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Sometimes I just use "Auto" to be quite honest because I usually don't have the patience to mess with manual settings.. :whistle:

2673787773_e2ea1ce6e8_b.jpg

I can't figure out how to keep the information in the file but .... if you can see what I mean.. "Before" ...

"After" ...

2674606526_d9c93aa402_b.jpg

I'll keep looking for better examples.. it's farely suttle but to me VERY obveous...

PERFECT EXAMPLE... Was a beautiful day and look at this.. no editing..

2673804355_8f860fa6c6_b.jpg

The EXIF for the first photo is:

Camera: Pentax K110D

Exposure: 0.003 sec (1/350)

Aperture: f/9.5

Focal Length: 75 mm

ISO Speed: 200

Exposure Bias: 0/10 EV

Flash: Flash did not fire

For the second photo:

Camera: Pentax K110D

Exposure: 0.003 sec (1/350)

Aperture: f/9.5

Focal Length: 70 mm

ISO Speed: 200

Exposure Bias: 0/10 EV

Flash: Flash did not fire

I shoot only in RAW but it seems the camera it's self is not taking advantage of the natural light of the sun!! What am I doing wrong here?? Are filter's a MUST?

All filters actually reduce the amount of light going into the camera.

I shoot only RAW, and a good chunk of my RAW shots need to be brightened while 99% of them need some kind of other adjustments. That's just how RAW works. When you shoot in JPG, the camera does all the RAW editing for you right away.

Your initial pictures look correctly exposed. That's all auto does, take all the information going in, and produce a picture that is averagely well exposed across the ranges (shadows, midtones, highlights)

You just need to learn how to use your camera in Manual mode to get better looking pictures.

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