From the course: Enscape Essential Training for Revit

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Exposure

Exposure

- [Narrator] I like to think of exposure as just being the amount of light that's hitting your scene. If something is over exposed, it will be very, very bright. If something is underexposed, it'll be very dark. Up until now, our auto exposure, underneath our visual settings, has been turned on. But if we would turn our auto exposure off, we'll see a much different scene. And in this scenario, we can see there's just too much light into the scene. Well, if I would make this number be larger, you would actually add light to the scene. Eventually it just makes the entire scene look grayed out. If I would adjust it all the way back, in this case, it actually doesn't look too bad. But in some scenes, it'll make the scene just be almost completely black or completely dark. The higher that you put your exposure, the more light that's actually getting to the camera so the brighter the scene will be, potentially the sharper the scene…

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