1110The exposure mode dial of the Nikon F75/F75D can be divided into twosections. One is the user-controlled exposure mode with Auto-Multi Program,Shutter-Priority Auto, Aperture-Priority Auto or Manual exposure modes,where the photographer can determine various exposure factors. The othersection is the point-and-shoot exposure mode in which the cameraautomatically controls various exposure settings. See pages 26-27, 35-37, 54-62 for more details on each exposure mode.Available Exposure Modes• User-controlled exposure mode• Point-and-shoot exposure modeP: Auto-Multi Program (p. 54)Camera controls shutter speed and apertureautomatically. Other settings, such as FlexibleProgram (page 55) or Exposure Compensation(page 64) are possible.S: Shutter-Priority Auto (p. 56)You set desired shutter speed, and the cameraselects the correct aperture. Freeze the motionof a moving subject or blur the subject.A: Aperture-Priority Auto (p. 58)You set the desired aperture, and the cameraselects the correct shutter speed. Lets youdetermine depth of the in-focus area.M : Manual (p. 60)Shutter speed and aperture are set manually.Suitable for taking photographs with uniqueeffects.a: AUTO mode (p. 26)Camera automatically controls all the exposuresettings. Suitable for taking pictures right away.s: Portrait mode (p. 35)Use this mode to take portraits. The backgroundis blurred to accentuate your main subject.d: Landscape mode (p. 35)Use this mode to take pictures of distant daytimeor nighttime scenes. The overall landscape willbe sharply focused.f: Close-Up mode (p. 36)Use this mode to take up-close pictures ofsubjects such as flowers or insects.g: Sports mode (p. 36)Use this mode to freeze the motion of fast-moving subjects.h: Night Portrait mode (p. 37)Use this mode for subjects with an evening ornight background.BEFORE YOU BEGINwww.mynikon.com.pl