>>6963758>remind me again about the best setting to take pics?Top left photoguy here.
>-Detailed pics in little light environment like first two pics of the OP.Youd be surprised to know there was an overhead light, and a desk lamp used. Its easier to turn down brightness with camera settings and generic photo editors than to do lowlight photography. You can fight overexposure easier than under exposure.
>-Best settings for pics outside with a lot of sunlight.You may need to play with the iso and white balance. However, one item you may find useful is a light diffuser. A simple piece of paper and some kind of frame and a ground stake will work wonders in giving outdoor pics an even brightness level.
>ISO:??The lower the iso number, the darker the film. The higher the iso, the more grainy it becomes but also the brightness increases. 100 is usually good for outdoors, but you may need to fine tune it. Depends on your camera. Most cell phones wont do sub 100 and peak at 800 or 1k.
>AWB:?Auto white balance usually does a good job. However, I exploit it. I set wb to incandescent, then use natural sunlight, or a florescent(led) bulb to make the pics a blue wash.
>Exposition:? (negative, positive ?)Shouldnt need to adjust that unless your in very low light. May come in handy when doing outdoor shots. Again with more light, you want shutter speed to be fast, with lower light you want to increase exposure time.
Hope some of that helps someone. Im far from the best photographer in the thread, or this site even. Im using a samsung galaxy s4 camera. When I first started posting here, I was called a retard posting potato pics. Not much has changed.