Matt Tilghman Offline Upload & Sell: On
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to echo what some have said, your camera will 'average out' the brightness in your frame (or in a smaller area, if you set it to), and make the average brightness appear 18% gray (if it were white). This may be what you want, depending on what is in your frame. But if there is a lot of snow, the white snow will greatly affect the average brightness, and hence the snow will be converted to a grayer 'color' by the meter.
To fix this, you can just watch your histogram, or stores sell 'gray cards' that you could expose to before taking the shot. Not many ppl do this anymore though.
Also, when snow is actually falling, I have had the most success with wide apertures and fast shutter speeds. It looks nice to freeze the snow while falling, and you get a better 'winter-like' feel if the snowflakes nearest you are kinda blurry (I feel... others may disagree)
Oh, and use a rain sleeve to protect your camera!
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