Hi guys,
I've been having a nightmare on a few recent shoots with my GH3. I'm shooting in manual mode and yet when I pan the lighting sometimes completely changes, as if there's an auto setting kicking in to change the light. It's giving me loads of headaches in post, because a clip that is otherwise well-shot, is suddenly having its lighting completely drop in brightness for example, during a smooth movement.
I've tried to look for this mystery setting to no avail and was wondering if you could help me out with what to look for.
So far I have got: i.Resolution - off Metering mode - center Continuous AF - off
Shooting with MF
Are you in the Manual Video mode? Manual aperture, shutter speed, and ISO? Manual everything?
I actually thought that in manual mode you couldn't put the aperture, shutter speed or ISO into auto? When I move the dials or cycle through any of those in the menus, none display an auto setting. I'm also shooting with custom WB... It really feels like there's some tiny setting somewhere messing with me.
Don't think the metering modes have anything to do with it. I was asking about manual movie mode to make sure you were doing aperture/shutter speed/ISO all in manual. Were you or were you not?
When you say in the movie mode menu, I'm in the Motion Picture menu and have selected 'M' on Exposure Mode but cannot put 'Manual M', only 'P', 'A', 'S' and 'M' - I presume that I'm looking in the wrong place but cannot see another option in which I can put letters like these.
The options 'Picture Mode' and 'Flkr Decrease' in the Motion Picture Menu are also greyed out.
Help me obi Yskunto, you're my only hope.
Just as an update to this thread. I've now got a GH4 and it does the same thing. Shooting movie mode...
Dial on top should be on Movie M (movie camera icon with letter M following)
That's it. If it still doesn't work, then send me your camera. ; )
In Movie M mode the camera screen brightness may change a little when you pan but the recorded result is unchanged and constant exposure.
If you use "iDynamic auto" the result changes according to scene contrast. It raises dark tones if the scene has hard light.
It's probably auto brightness setting for lcd - is the recorded footage showing this?
It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!