 Exposure Modes.
Exposure Modes. The Nikon D3000 gives you all the  exposure options you'd expect in a consumer SLR. Available exposure  modes include Full Auto, Program AE, Manual, Aperture Priority, and  Shutter Priority modes with shutter speeds from 1/4,000 to 30 seconds  available in 1/3 EV steps, as well as a Bulb setting for longer  exposures. Also provided are the six standard Scene modes found on most  consumer Nikon SLRs (Portrait, Landscape, Child, Sports, Macro, and  Night Portrait), and a Flash-Off Auto mode. New for the Nikon D3000 is a  GUIDE mode designed to help users through complicated settings by  letting them select what kind of photo they want to take and the camera  makes the settings from there.
A very nice touch that's common to other Nikon DSLRs is that, while  in Program AE mode, you can rotate the Command dial to select different  combinations of aperture and shutter speed settings than those normally  chosen by the autoexposure system. (That is, if the automatic program  would have chosen 1/125 second and f/5.6, you could instead direct the  camera to use 1/60 at f/8 or 1/30 at f/11, to get greater depth of  field.) This is a very handy option for those times when you need some  measure of increased control, but still want the camera to do most of  the work for you. We personally use this capability more than Aperture-  or Shutter-priority metering in our own shooting.
An interesting feature when using Manual exposure mode is the  electronic analog exposure display visible in the optical viewfinder  data readout. This shows the amount the camera thinks an image will be  over- or underexposed, based on the settings you have selected, and  helps you find the best exposure for the subject.
 Exposure Metering.
Exposure Metering.  Nikon has one of the most sophisticated and flexible metering systems  on the market today. Like most SLRs, there are three main metering modes  on the Nikon D3000: Matrix, Center-Weighted, and Spot metering. Where  Nikon's system differs is in the capability of these modes. Nikon's  matrix metering is called 3D Color Matrix II, as it takes color as well  as distance into account. (Distance requires the use of CPU-equipped  lenses.) It covers a wide area of the frame with a 420-pixel RGB sensor.  The Nikon D3000's Center-Weighted metering mode gives a weight of 75%  to an 8mm diameter circle in center of frame. Spot meters a 3.5mm  diameter circle (about 2.5% of the frame) centered on the active focus  area. (Most DSLRs only meter the very center of the frame in Spot  metering mode.) The 420-pixel RGB sensor also serves to ascertain  automatic white-balance, and provides assistance for focus tracking when  the subject leaves the AF sensor area. Metering range is specified at 0  to 20 EV in Matrix or Center-Weighted, and 2 to 20 EV in Spot metering  mode.
 Exposure Lock.
Exposure Lock. The  AE-L/AF-L button locks the exposure and/or autofocus, useful for  off-center subjects in tricky lighting. It can be programmed for AE  lock, AF lock, AE + AF lock, or various other functions via the custom  menu. You can also program the button to toggle instead of requiring the  button to be held.
 Exposure Compensation.
Exposure Compensation.  Exposure compensation on the Nikon D3000 is adjustable from -5 to +5  exposure equivalents (EV) in 1/3 EV step increments, and is controllable  in Program, Aperture-priority, or Shutter-priority modes. Note that in  Manual exposure mode, the EV button becomes a shift button that changes  the function of the Command dial from controlling the shutter speed to  changing the Aperture. The Nikon D3000 does not support exposure  bracketing.
 
 ISO Sensitivity.
ISO Sensitivity.  ISO ranges from 100 to 1,600 and can be extended up to ISO 3,200 (Hi  1). ISO can only be adjusted in single EV steps (100, 200, 400, 800,  etc.). Nikon's excellent Auto ISO feature is carried over as well, which  allows you to set both the upper ISO limit (up to ISO 3,200) as well as  the minimum shutter speed (selectable from 1s to 1/2,000s) required  before ISO is increased automatically. 
 White Balance.
White Balance.  The Nikon D3000 offers the usual white balance settings: Auto, six  presets consisting of Incandescent, Fluorescent, Direct Sunlight, Flash,  Cloudy, Shade, and a manual mode where white-balance is determined from  a white or grey card. The Fluorescent preset has seven sub-settings  consisting of Sodium Vapor (2,700K), Warm-white (3,000K), White  (3,700K), Cool (4,200K), Day White (5,000K), and High Temperature  Mercury Vapor (7,200K), and the manual setting allows one custom  white-balance measurements to be stored. All the presets and manual  settings are tweakable via a 2D fine-tuning grid display. 
 Active D-Lighting.
Active D-Lighting.  D-Lighting has proven a popular post-processing feature in Nikon's  consumer digital SLRs, as well as some of the company's point &  shoot models. It's a quick software process that attempts to overcome  underexposed images, and bring detail out of shadows. Active D-Lighting  on the D3000 doesn't have the many options found on higher-end models,  though, just Off and On.
 
 Picture Control.
Picture Control.  Nikon has standardized its Picture Control system so that camera  settings for sharpening, contrast, brightness, saturation, and hue can  be finely adjusted and ported to other Nikon digital SLRs that support  the system. The D3 was the first camera compatible with the option, and  all Nikon SLRs since, including the D3000 follow the standard. The Nikon  D3000 has six presets called Standard, Neutral, Vivid, Monochrome,  Portrait, and Landscape.
Sharpness can be adjusted in ten steps, along with an Auto setting;  contrast, saturation, and hue can be adjusted in seven steps, while hue  is adjustable in three steps. There is also a five-step "Quick Adjust"  setting which exaggerates or mutes the effect without having to adjust  each slider individually. When Monochrome Picture Control is selected,  Hue and Saturation are replaced by Filter Effects and Toning  respectively. Filter Effects offers Off, Yellow, Orange, Red, and Green  settings, while Toning offers B&W, Sepia, Cyanotype, Red, Yellow,  Green, Blue Green, Blue, Purple Blue and Red Purple settings. Note that  Picture Controls are only active in Program, Aperture-priority or  Shutter-priority and Manual exposure modes, as the Scene modes already  apply preset image adjustments. Of course, the Nikon D3000 also offers  sRGB and Adobe RGB settings, in a separate Color Space menu.
 
 Noise Reduction.
Noise Reduction. The  Nikon D3000 offers high ISO noise reduction, but only one level: Off  and On. Noise reduction is performed at ISO 400 and higher. When set to  Off, minimal noise reduction is performed at ISOs above 800. 
 Release Modes.
Release Modes. The  Nikon D3000's release modes are selected via the menu system. Release  modes consist of Single Frame, Continuous, Self-timer, Delayed Remote  (two second delay), and Quick-response Remote. The Nikon D3000's  Continuous mode is rated by Nikon for up to 3 frames per second (we got  2.99 frames per second in our testing), for a total of 16 Large/Fine  JPEGs before the buffer fills and the camera slows. Also, when shooting  JPEGs of a very complex scene with a lot of sharp, fine detail may also  compress less and result in lower buffer capacities.
Self-Timer mode opens the shutter by a delay of 2 seconds) after  the shutter button is pressed. The Remote release modes are for use with  the optional ML-L3 wireless remote. The 2-second delay option is useful  for hiding the remote when taking photos that include the operator.
 Retouch Menu.
Retouch Menu. The  Nikon D3000 has an extensive Retouch menu, though not as extensive as  the D5000's. The amount of image alteration that can be performed  in-camera is starting to rival what basic image editing software  packages can do on a computer, so much so that many users may not feel  the need to use a computer for Nikon D3000 image editing at all. Retouch  options include adjusting D-Lighting, red-eye correction, image  cropping (trim), converting to monochrome, applying up to seven filter  effects, adjusting color balance, resizing to small images (for TV, Web  or email), image overlay for combining two RAW images into one JPEG, NEF  (RAW) processing, "Quick Retouch" for fast adjustments to saturation  and contrast, color outline,  miniature effect, and stop-motion movies.  The D5000 adds: straighten for fixing slanted horizons, distortion  control for fixing lens distortion, fisheye effect, and perspective  control. 
 
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