no, if you scan and colour grade yourself you can get all the exposures back to look like the "correct" one.
you expose for the desired end result and processing pipeline.
in digital you often can not even capture the range of a natural scene in one go. correct or not.
then you have to start compensating for those problems by under or overexposing and then correct it later.
very common in motion picture shooting.
no, if you scan and colour grade yourself you can get all the exposures back to look like the "correct" one.
you expose for the desired end result and processing pipeline.
in digital you often can not even capture the range of a natural scene in one go. correct or not.
then you have to start compensating for those problems by under or overexposing and then correct it later.
very common in motion picture shooting.