LG's technique seems to cope a little better with very
bright images however, for example when shooting subjects with the sun directly in the background.
Not exact matches
However, if you shoot in
bright light, it can also blow out your
image.
Sadly my
images of the Emily Muco presentation were not quite right, as most of the views I captured were of the models backsides,
however, the presentation provided a
bright and cheerful collection inspired by Mexican colours (with a touch of Frida Khalo) and nostalgia.
Comparing The Karate Kid with my ossified VHS bootleg,
however, the saturation is indeed
brighter and the
images are sharper, though instances of edge enhancement and overcorrected colours tend to mar the overall experience.
However, darker
images look a lot better than
brighter ones, which actually tells us a lot about its cause.
However, if they take up too much space, have too many
bright colours or smilies / moving
images, they may be removed as they can make threads harder to read and disrupt the flow of conversations.
The flash is not truly centered in the frame,
however, with the left - hand side of the
image brighter on flash - only exposures.