Olympus E-450 Introduction Manual

Page of 140
33
EN
2
Shooting
 gui
des
 k
 Im
pr
oving your s
h
ooting sk
ills
Changing white balance
The color of water in pictures appears different depending 
on whether it is a lake reflecting nearby trees or a seashore 
surrounded by a coral reef. To capture the subtle difference 
in color, try changing the white balance setting. Change the 
setting for different situations, such as by using [
55300K] 
for sunny days and [
27500K] for outdoor shaded areas 
on sunny days.
Changing metering mode
Depending on the depth of the water and the direction of the sun, 
the brightness of the water can differ significantly in different 
areas of the same composition. There is also a difference in the 
brightness of forests depending on the way the trees overlap each 
other. If you know which areas you want to emphasize the 
compensation in the image composition, you can change the 
metering mode. When set to [
e] (Digital ESP metering), the 
camera automatically assesses the brightness in the composition 
and determines the exposure. To emphasize a specific partial 
exposure in the composition, change the metering mode to [J] 
(center weighted metering) or [n] (spot metering), adjust the 
metering area to the locations that you want to adjust the 
exposure and then measure the exposure.
Changing saturation
There may be times when you cannot reproduce the desired color even when using white 
balance or exposure compensation. In this case, you can change the [SATURATION] setting 
to achieve the desired color. The [SATURATION] setting includes two levels of high and low 
settings. When the setting is high, a vivid color is used.
g“Aperture priority shooting” (P. 43), “Shutter priority shooting” (P. 44), “Changing the 
metering mode” (P. 47), “Exposure compensation” (P. 48), “Selecting the white 
balance” (P. 60), “[SATURATION] : Vividness of the color” (P. 64)
Taking flower pictures
The proper method for taking pictures of flowers differs depending on whether you want to 
capture, for example, a single flower, a field of blooming flowers, a deep red rose, or the light 
color of a sweet pea.
Changing white balance
There are many colors of flowers ranging from light to vivid 
ones. Depending on the colors of the flowers, subtle color 
shades may not be captured as seen. In this case, you can 
check the light conditions and change the white balance 
setting. At [AUTO], the camera automatically determines 
the type of light and shoots using the proper white balance. 
However, you can bring out subtle color shades more 
effectively by changing the setting according to shooting 
conditions, such as by using [
55300K] for sunny days 
and [
27500K] for outdoor shaded areas on sunny days.
s0029_e_00_0_unified.book  Page 33  Monday, March 2, 2009  5:26 PM