>>3761379>Hence a tiny Dr will make a black and white pattern, where a high DR will be shades of gray.A low DR will look either all white or all black when the scene is exposed near its limits. Scene contrast won't translate to image contrast if you're working into the base or shoulder area, so you'll get a completely black image where you should have gray and black for example. Higher DR is more latitude. Changing ISO is the equivalent to picking a film where the exposure values (lx•s) of your scene mostly correspond to the latitude area of the film. If you use low ISO for a dark scene you get poor contrast because you're operating in the base range (which on digital is a harsher transition than on the curve in pic related). If you do high ISO for a bright scene the opposite is true, you get too much of your exposure in the shoulder range. The result is poor contrast.
>EII see what confused you now. Some cinema cameras have fixed ISO and only adjust exposure compensation.
>aperture and shutter speed not ISO>what is the exposure triangle >HDR is lower contrastkek
>>3761382kek, I don't even hate Fuji, just fujifags. They are consistently the most ignorant posters on the board.