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A 46, A 46) – Nikon S100 User Manual

Page 64

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46

Scene Mode (Shooting Suited to the Scene)

Sh
oot

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F

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a

tures

A Draw

Write a memo or draw a picture on the touch panel display and save it as an image.
The image is saved at an image mode setting of l (640 × 480).
See “Using the Draw Option” (

E 2) for more information.

o Backlighting

Use when light is coming from behind the subject, throwing features or details into
shadow.
Tap the

d tab (A 11) and tap Y HDR to enable or disable the HDR (high dynamic

range) function.
When HDR is set to Off (default setting): The flash fires to

prevent the subject from being hidden in shadow.
- The camera focuses at the center of the frame. The focus

area can be changed with the touch shutter or touch AF/
AE option (

A 38).

- When the shutter-release button is pressed all the way

down, one picture is taken.

When HDR is set to On: Use when taking pictures with very

bright and dark areas in the same frame.
- If there are very bright areas and very dark areas in the

frame, the color of the o icon is inverted.

- Digital zoom is not available.
- The camera focuses at the center of the frame. The focus

area can be changed with the touch shutter or touch AF/
AE option (

A 38).

- When the shutter-release button is pressed all the way

down, the camera takes pictures continuously at high speed, and saves the following
two images.
- An image processed by D-Lighting (

A 73) at the time of shooting

- A composite image with high dynamic range (HDR) 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 is the only image saved.

- Once the shutter-release button is pressed all the way, hold the camera steadily

without moving it until a still image is displayed. After taking a picture, 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 picture will be

narrower than that seen in the monitor at the time of shooting.