Olympus E-450 User Manual

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35
EN
2
Shooting
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Taking night scene pictures
There are different types of night scenes, from the afterglow of a sunset and city lights at 
night to special light displays and firework displays.
Using a tripod
Because a slow shutter speed is needed to capture night 
scenes, a tripod is required to prevent camera shake. If a 
tripod is not available, you should place the camera on a 
stable surface to prevent camera shake. Even if the 
camera is secured, camera shake may occur when 
pressing the shutter button. Therefore, it is recommended 
to use the remote control or self timer.
Changing shooting mode
Night scenes have different levels of brightness, and the balance of the brightness in the 
composition is not uniform. Start by using A (aperture priority shooting) mode to take the 
picture. Set the aperture to the medium setting (about F8 or F11) and allow the camera to 
automatically select the shutter speed. When shooting a night scene, because the camera 
sets the exposure to match the dark areas which occupy a majority of the composition and the 
image often turns out whitish (overexposed), adjust the exposure compensation to -1 or -1.5. 
Use [REC VIEW] to check the image and adjust the aperture and exposure compensation as 
necessary.
Image noise can easily occur when shooting at slow shutter speeds. In this case, set [NOISE 
REDUCT.]
 to [ON] to reduce noise.
Using manual focus
In cases where you cannot use AF (auto focus) to focus on the 
subject because the subject is too dark or you cannot focus in time 
to take pictures, such as during a fireworks display, set the AF 
mode to [MF] (manual focus) and focus manually. To take pictures 
of night scenes, turn the focus ring of the lens and check whether 
you can see the lights of the night scene clearly. To take pictures of 
a fireworks display, adjust the focus of the lens to infinite unless 
you are using a long focus lens. If you know the approximate 
distance to the subject, it is recommended that you focus on 
something that is at the same distance in advance.
g“Program shooting” (P. 43), “Aperture priority 
shooting” (P. 43), “Remote control shooting” (P. 57), “AF mode 
selection” (P. 51), “Noise reduction” (P. 65), “REC VIEW” (P. 90)
s0029_e_00_0_unified.book  Page 35  Monday, March 2, 2009  5:26 PM