Ysarex
Been spending a lot of time on here!
- Joined
- Nov 27, 2011
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- 7,455
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- Location
- St. Louis
- Can others edit my Photos
- Photos OK to edit
Sure, but the issue becomes with a series of pictures. In P mode you'd have to adjust every single one. In manual you can get your basic setting, and then unless the lighting changes you just snap the next one. In P mode, if the camera's light meter reads some minor change in the lighting, it's going to attempt to 'fix it'. So, for instance say you're shooting a wedding reception indoors. The DJ lights might flash jsut a bit differently, and all of the sudden your camera decided to make a completely different exposure.
In P mode you don't have to adjust every single shot -- only the first one, just like manual. Assume the camera in P mode calculates a shutter of 1/250 at f/11 and I'd rather be at f/5.6. Index finger turn of the wheel and the camera is now set at 1/1000 at f/5.6 and I take the photo. Take another photo and the camera doesn't jump back to 1/250 at f/11 it stays at 1/1000 at f/5.6. If a minor lighting change occurs those settings will not change to a completely different exposure, especially since I also keep my meter set for center or spot.
When I decide to intervene with the meter's calculated exposure our knob turning is equal -- it's a tie. I do that pretty often but not 100% of the time. In more than 1/2 of my photos I'm very happy to accept the meter's calculated exposure and so I'm just a simple one wheel nudge away from ready or if I'm shooting a series of photos we're again tied as my exposure setting won't change unless the lighting changes. A few thousand photos later I've turned a few less knobs. This isn't a big deal at all and I wouldn't bother with these threads except for the __________ who start that, "I'm a real photographer and I only shoot manual" cr*p. They're not helping people who ask and want to learn. For the record you're not one of them.
....The problem I have with using P mode unless it's really by far the most efficient way is that it can surprise you too much. With manual, after you've taken one shot, you basically know what the following exposures are going to look like. With P, it can just decide to drastically change things out of nowhere. You take one shot and it looks great, you take the next shot and all of the sudden it's exposing it with drastically more DoF or another half stop of light. With manual, nothing changes unless I change it. That's both the good and bad of both modes. With manual, you have to change it, which is sometimes an inconvenience, but with P, the camera changes it, which is sometimes annoying. It remains my opinion that if you only use 1-2 of your modes, you're not using your camera to the full extent of its abilities, and you're making your life as a photographer harder than it needs to be.
P mode never surprises me. Machines and computer programs are designed to behave in predictable ways and they do. Cameras set to P mode do not decide to drastically change things out of nowhere -- that's nonsense. Today's camera's in fact behave with fantastic predictable consistency. In the OP's original post she said, "I've got to assume Nikon wouldn't include if there wasn't a decent use for it." That's a fair assumption. Nikon's camera engineers have a pretty good idea of how to design a really usable camera. My camera was designed by Canon engineers and it works the same way.
Joe
If you've ever shot under cycling power lights, you will see how crazy auto modes can get, what tends to happen is they meter one split second, then the cycle changes, and they basically hit the exposure on the exact opposite part of the pwoer cycle, causing the exposures to go CRAZY. Same thing with concerts. The stage lights drive the camera's meter crazy, in P mode one second you'll have the singer wildly overexposed, and in the next drastically underexposed.
Sure, for about 70% of most people's shots, it just really doesn't matter which mode they use, as long as they know how to use whatever mode they're in. 25% of the time it doesn't matter very much. But about 5% of the time what mode you are in can make or break how efficiently you can get the shot. I guess you're saying that 70% of the time that it really doesn't matter, and most of that 15% it only matters a little bit, you're in P mode. Sure, I really don't think that matters one way or the other in that case, so I guess we agree there.
Yeah, I'm just going to have to change those percentages a bit. I'm saying that for 99% of most people's shots (the ones not at concerts with cycling power lights) using a camera in P mode produces solid consistent results where the camera doesn't drastically change things out of nowhere -- we're good. Honestly I don't take photos at concerts. When I do attend there aren't any cycling power lights and I'm there to listen to the music. We can add cycling power lights at concerts to the list of when you should use M; that works for me.
Joe