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Custom Functions
The custom functions built into your camera are there for your convenience and to save time in establishing camera settings you use frequently. Based on what I see on my photography tours, few people take advantage of them.
Let me give you an example of how they can be used. Most photographers use HDR often for landscapes because, and I’m sure you know, the sky is commonly brighter than the earth-bound landforms. Digital cameras can’t expose correctly for both the very bright areas of the frame --the highlights -- as well as the very dark areas -- the shadows -- in one exposure. So, we take 3 or 5 or 7 shots of the same scene, usually from a tripod but not necessarily, and in post-processing Photoshop or a third party software program combines the several bracketed exposures into a single wellexposed image.
In order to do that, several settings have to be chosen on the camera. It is time consuming and somewhat laborious to go through this every time you want to create an HDR bracketed sequence, and that’s where the custom function commands come in.