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Nikon D300 - Page 534

Nikon D300
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3. Choose the amount of D-Lighting you want for the
chosen image, using the Multi Selector to scroll up or
down. You’ll choose from Low, Normal (or medium),
and High D-Lighting (see Figure 6-3, image 3).
4. When the image on the right looks the way you want it
to look, press the OK button to save the new file. The
D300(S) will display a brief Image saved notice and then
display the new file on the Monitor.
My Recommendation: There is no one setting that is correct
for all images. I often use Normal (medium) to see if an
image needs more or less D-Lighting and then leave it at that
or change to High or Low as needed. Remember that any
amount of D-Lighting has the potential to introduce noise in
the darker areas of the image, so the less D-Lighting you use,
the better.
Red-Eye Correction
(User’s Manual – D300S page 320; D300 page 335)
Red-eye correction attempts to change bright red
pupils—caused by flash exposure reflection—back to their
normal dark color. Red-eye makes a person look like one of
those aliens with glowing eyes from a science fiction show.
If you’ve used flash to create a picture, the Red-eye correction
function will work on the image if it can detect any red-eye. If
it can’t detect red-eye in the image, it will not open the
red-eye system but will briefly display a screen informing you
that the camera was unable to detect red-eye in the selected
picture.
534

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