0

Out of 0 Ratings

Owner's of the Nikon Digital Camera 26356 gave it a score of 0 out of 5. Here's how the scores stacked up:
  • Reliability

    0 out of 5
  • Durability

    0 out of 5
  • Maintenance

    0 out of 5
  • Performance

    0 out of 5
  • Ease of Use

    0 out of 5
of 224
 
37
Scene Mode (Shooting Suited to Scenes)
Shooting Features
m Fireworks show O
The shutter speed is fixed to 4 seconds.
Camera focuses at infinity.
When the shutter-release button is pressed halfway, the focus indicator (A6) always
glows green.
n Black and white copy
The camera focuses on the subject at the center of the frame. The focus area can be
changed with the touch shutter or touch AF/AE option (A53).
Use with macro mode (A48) when shooting a subject at close distance.
o Backlighting
The camera focuses on the subject at the center of the frame. The focus area can be
changed with the touch shutter or touch AF/AE option (A53).
Press the d button (
A2) and tap Y HDR to enable or disable the HDR (high
dynamic range) function.
p Off (default setting): The flash fires to prevent the subject from being hidden in
shadow.
- When the shutter-release button is pressed all the way down, one image is taken.
o On: HDR processing is applied (useful when taking images with very bright and dark
areas in the same frame).
- Digital zoom is not available.
- When the shutter-release button is pressed all the way down, the camera takes images
continuously at high speed, and saves the following 2 images.
- A non-HDR composite image
- An HDR composite image in which the loss of details in highlights or shadows is
minimized
- The second image saved is an HDR composite image. If there is only enough memory
to save one image, an image processed by D-Lighting (A63) at the time of shooting,
in which dark areas of the image are corrected, is the only image saved.
- Once the shutter-release button is pressed all the way, hold the camera and do not
move it until a still image is displayed on the shooting screen. After taking an image, do
not turn the camera off before the monitor switches to the shooting screen.
- The angle of view (i.e., the area visible in the frame) seen in the saved image will be
narrower than that seen in the monitor at the time of shooting.