Quote:
Originally Posted by DigiDiva
I often find the sky gets blown out on my landscapes on a grey day. It's clearly my lack of experience and I maybe need to practice bracketing too (never tried it yet). I agree about trees, flowers, macro's as ideas to shoot on cloudy days.
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Yes, it happens. While the sky remains relatively bright, even on a grey day, the ground doesn't get the same illumination.... so a 'straight' exposure (enough to give enough light for the ground) will always make the sky wash out.... a good shot of sky, to get some texture, will make the ground almost completely dark.
There are (at least) two solutions....
a. Bracket your shots (quite wide bracket, like at least 2 stops apart) and then open both in an editor, with one image on a layer on top of another, e.g. the shot with a good ground at the bottom, the shot with the good sky on top. Then, with a layer mask, remove the dark foreground from the upper layer. (A layer Mask is better than the Eraser for this, if only because if you remove too much you can put it back in again)
or
b. Get the hang of Graduated Neutral Density filters.... a fairly basic set consists of nine filters: 3 different strengths (1 , 2 or 3 stops) plus 3 different 'graduations' (hard, medium, soft) between the dark and the clear. You can get stronger filters but most people use them in combinations.