Panasonic DMCGH4GH Operating Guide

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5.
 Picture Quality and Colour Tone Settings
You can combine 3 pictures with different levels of exposure into a single picture with rich 
gradation. You can minimise the loss of gradations in bright areas and dark areas when, 
for example, the contrast between the background and the subject is large.
An image combined by HDR is recorded in JPEG.
What is HDR?
HDR stands for High Dynamic Range and refers to a technique for expressing a wide 
contrast range.
Do not move the camera during the continuous shooting after pressing the shutter button.
You cannot take the next picture until the combination of pictures is complete.
A moving subject may be recorded with unnatural blurs.
The angle of view becomes narrow slightly when [Auto Align] is set to [ON].
Flash is fixed to [Œ] (forced flash off).
Not available in these cases:
[HDR] does not work for the pictures taken during a motion picture recording.
[HDR] is not available in the following cases.
When [Quality] is set to [
], [
] or [
]
When using [Time Lapse Shot]
When using [Stop Motion Animation] (only when [Auto Shooting] is set)
Combining pictures with different exposures ([HDR])
Applicable modes: 
>
[Rec] 
> [HDR]
[ON]
Records HDR pictures.
[OFF]
Does not record HDR pictures.
[SET]
[Dynamic Range]
[AUTO]: Automatically adjusts the exposure range according to the differences 
between the bright and dark areas.
[n1 EV]/[n2 EV]/[n3 EV]:
Adjusts the exposure within the selected exposure parameters.
[Auto Align]
[ON]:
Automatically corrects camera shake (jitter) and other problems that 
can cause the images to misalign. Recommended for use during 
hand-held shooting.
[OFF]:
Image misalignment not adjusted. Recommended when a tripod is 
used.
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