To compensate this I was thinking in changing the Exposure. I.E: I´m trying to shoot an image with 1/200 speedy ISO 100 indoor and the image is dark. I select mode "M" and try to change the values of Exposure by pressing Q button or Menu option.
Yes it does automatically combine but then the creativity is down to you with the many fine controls that majority of HDR software offers. The best idea is to do the 7 bracketed images in RAW and then use a HDR post-processing software. The reason I say that is in-camera HDR will make it how it thinks and you have no great control over it not to mention jpeg is a lossy file type which isn't great if perhaps you want to edit it at a later date. Great post but brings the user back from being creative to automatic unimaginative mode. Great info, recently bought my 70D and although I have not had much time to use it, this weekend I'll do me and I will do many HDR photos Thanks for the concise HDR functions/capabilities of the 70D.I'll let this be a motivator for me to get out there and play. Canon really has put a lot into this body. Yes the 70D is an amazing camera.I've shot macro, astro, and BIF with it.
the manual isn't very clear and I have only managed to get it to take 3 shots.
Graham T for this, I knew the 70 could do 7 shots AEB, but couldn't find how to change it. Michael & Sherry Martin edited this topic 108 months ago.
Originally posted at 10:55AM, 13 October 2013 PDT Shots can be taken in RAW and/or JPEG, saved to the memory card for post processing in your favorite software. When set at 5, you can vary the exposure all the way to +-6 EV. In the Custom Function Settings C.Fn 1-5, the number of shots taken with AEB can be changed from the usual 3 shots to 5 or 7. Under the camera 3 tab, turn the dial to set the exposure range. (3) The camera also does Auto Exposure Bracketing (AEB). You can also select whether the images are Auto Image Aligned (in-camera) or not. It also allows for doing this once or for every shot until the setting is disabled. This mode allows selection of the exposure range to as much as +- 3 EV. Again, three images of different exposures are automatically captured then in-camera merged resulting in a single JPEG image. (2) With more control options, use the HDR (High Dynamic Range) Shooting mode found under the camera 4 tab. Three continuous shots are taken at different exposures then in-camera processed into one JPEG image, with a wide tonal range, that minimizes blocked-up shadows and improves highlights. (1) Fully automatic uses the Special Scene Mode (SCN) called HDR Backlight Control mode. I’m impressed this camera automatically takes bracketed, different exposure shots and combines them into one image three different ways – ranging from (1) fully automatic, (2) some control (both in-camera processed), then (3) auto taken for post processing in software such as Photomatix.