When, why and how to use exposure compensation

Jul 26, 2017

John Aldred

John Aldred is a photographer with over 20 years of experience in the portrait and commercial worlds. He is based in Scotland and has been an early adopter – and occasional beta tester – of almost every digital imaging technology in that time. As well as his creative visual work, John uses 3D printing, electronics and programming to create his own photography and filmmaking tools and consults for a number of brands across the industry.

When, why and how to use exposure compensation

Jul 26, 2017

John Aldred

John Aldred is a photographer with over 20 years of experience in the portrait and commercial worlds. He is based in Scotland and has been an early adopter – and occasional beta tester – of almost every digital imaging technology in that time. As well as his creative visual work, John uses 3D printing, electronics and programming to create his own photography and filmmaking tools and consults for a number of brands across the industry.

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Exposure compensation can be a tricky subject to wrap your head around. The biggest puzzle often being “why do we even need it? Isn’t it easier to just go into manual mode?”. Well, sure, it might be, but it’s not always possible. And sometimes the semi & fully automatic modes just make your shooting life easier. But what exactly is it? And how does it work?

 

This video from The Photographer Academy will help to demystify exposure compensation. It explains what it is, as well as when and where you might want to use it. The video’s host, David, also goes on to demonstrate how it can help with a potentially difficult subject.

YouTube video

In the video, Davidm shooting in P mode believes the camera is underexposing the scene. It’s a bright sunny day, but the camera’s trying to even it out to a nice “correct” exposure that puts everything in the middle. So, he dials in 2/3rds of a stop of exposure compensation to force the meter to overexpose what it thinks it should be. This gives him the shot he wants.

Even when shooting fully manual, though, if you’re using the camera’s meter to help you judge exposure, then exposure compensation can be useful. If you tell your camera’s exposure compensation to give you an extra stop, the meter zeroes out when you’re overexposing the scene (as far as the camera’s concerned) by one stop. Exposure compensation, even in manual mode, can also have an effect on flash units you may be using, too.

My most common use for exposure compensation is when I’m forced to bring my camera to family events. I’ll shoot aperture priority with -2EV dialled into the camera and an SB-900 on the hotshoe in TTL mode bouncing off the ceiling. Dialing -2EV into the camera tells it to not only underexpose the ambient by 2 stops, but the flash exposure, too. So I’ll dial +2EV into the flash’s exposure compensation. This gives a good exposure on my subject, while leaving the rest of the room slightly darker.

The other time I often use exposure compensation is when I’m using a camera that gives me no alternative.

For example, my Nikon N90s was my first ever camera, and I still use it to this day. But with Nikon’s G lenses that don’t have aperture rings, I’m limited to Shutter Priority and P modes only. There’s no aperture control at all. Going into shutter priority mode means I can knock the exposure compensation dial up and down to force the aperture to be where I want it. I’m completely ignoring the meter at this point, but it gives me control where I previously had none.

It’s one of those things that’s worth learning and understanding, even if you don’t plan to regularly use it. You never know when it can be a handy workaround to another problem.

 

 

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John Aldred

John Aldred

John Aldred is a photographer with over 20 years of experience in the portrait and commercial worlds. He is based in Scotland and has been an early adopter – and occasional beta tester – of almost every digital imaging technology in that time. As well as his creative visual work, John uses 3D printing, electronics and programming to create his own photography and filmmaking tools and consults for a number of brands across the industry.

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14 responses to “When, why and how to use exposure compensation”

  1. James Fogg Avatar
    James Fogg

    Before I have to consider exposure compensation I have to consider automatic exposure, which is something I rarely use.

    1. LensLord Avatar
      LensLord

      I agree completely. I pick all my choices manually, as a conscious choice. …

  2. Duncan Knifton Avatar
    Duncan Knifton

    Mines virtually always on +0.3 or even +0.7
    just gives that extra kick in the weddings I shoot.

  3. Kryn Sporry Avatar
    Kryn Sporry

    Yes I do. When I need it, because I need it, and by using the appropriate exposure compensation controls.

  4. Viggo Næss Avatar
    Viggo Næss

    I have even offset my camera’s 0 ev to be +7/8 over, because cameras always underexpose. Even then I’m going over a lot, and pull down in post instead.

  5. Ash Avatar
    Ash

    I use Exposure compensation a lot in combination with the exposure lock button on my mirrorless camera. Lock exposure on a scene first, then tweak the exp comp dial and watch the results in the electronic viewfinder.

    Far more intuitive than using the exp comp dial and guessing what the final exposure will look like.

  6. Kiko Arribasplata Avatar
    Kiko Arribasplata

    Which one do choose to auto reset exposure. When I choose on (Auto reset) the exposure does not reset, even if I turn off the camera. I have to manually reset the exposures to “0” when I turn the camera back on.

  7. Valentin Zahariev Avatar
    Valentin Zahariev

    never use EC, using only manual mode. but sometimes i use EC on fill-flash

  8. Michael Beckerman Avatar
    Michael Beckerman

    The light metering on most new cameras today is so good that you almost never need to use this feature. Unless it is a very complex lit shot that you are trying to compensate/adjust for, of course, but very few shots will ever actually fall into that category. Post processing tools are so good now as well that you can fix almost anything, especially if you shoot RAW.

    1. Patrick Mayon Avatar
      Patrick Mayon

      It doesn’t have to be complex. A landscape with snow, or by night is enough for the camera to get it wrong.

  9. Jyi Offer Avatar
    Jyi Offer

    Useful in priority modes to compensate for brighter or darker clothing.

  10. Ryan Twentey Avatar
    Ryan Twentey

    I use it to make a flash a little more subtle (rarely, since I’m a natural light person), but mostly because my vintage glass could use a little help at times. It’s great in a pinch where the lighting is actively dynamic and difficult to meter – so a watered down “zone system adaptation”. Oh! And with snow to give it that little “pop” to bring it back to white when metering it.

  11. Henry Rodgers Avatar
    Henry Rodgers

    Mine is always on 1.0. Just did it one day for concerts and got used to it for everything else.

  12. Albin Avatar
    Albin

    Other exposure controls all have known additional impacts on the resulting image: aperture (DOF), ISO (noise), shutter speed (motion). I’ve never read any analysis anywhere of EC in this regard – seems to be a free pass for however many stops regardless of other settings. Is that so?