conversely a rapid string of notes going down the musical scale if the image is judged as underexposed

• Downgrades the approval status to yellow (if Approval is set to ‘Auto’).

Note that some shots may trigger the warning even though they are exposed accord- ing to your intentions. You should consider these warnings only as a guideline.

3. If no problem is detected, then the image is saved with green status.

If you set Approval to ‘Auto’, all images will be stored as Green if judged as correct and Yellow if judged as technically doubtful. No images are ever stored as Red automatically!

4.When you are browsing through your shots, keep an eye on the approval status of each and consider whether you should promote or demote each shot based on its appearance on the preview screen. You can also apply a browse filter to, for exam- ple, browse only red shots when looking for images to delete or to browse only green shots to make sure you have a good version of each shot that you need.

5.When you begin working with the images on your computer, use the approval sta- tus as a guide for organizing your work. For example, you might begin by opening and optimizing the green shots and then go to the yellow shots only if you still need more images and then, finally, check the red shots as a last resort.

Note that the system is very flexible so you can use it in any way that you like. For exam- ple, you can set the camera to assign all new images a yellow or green status regardless of the exposure warning. Be careful when assigning red status because red images may be deleted if the current storage medium becomes full.

Reading and changing the approval status

The current approval status of each shot is indicated in two ways:

In most preview modes, the current status is indicated by a coloured dot in the bottom-right corner of the screen.

Each image is given a name that indicates its approval status. Approved (green) image names start with “A” (e.g., “A0000043”); warning (yellow) images start with “B” (e.g., “B0000043”); and images marked for delete (red) start with “C”. Because of this naming convention, you will also be able to sort your image files by status after you have copied them to your computer (e.g., by listing the folder by file name).

By keeping an eye on the file name and/or coloured dot as you browse your images at the single-image, four-thumbnail or nine-thumbnail level, you can easily see the current approval status of each of them.

To change the approval status of the currently displayed/selected image, simply press the approval button until the desired approval status is shown.

Note that you can set the camera to filter by approval status as you browse, which means that some images may be hidden (though they are still there). See “Browsing by Approval Status”, below, for details about how to work with the filter.

Be careful when assigning red status because red images may be deleted if the current storage medium becomes full.

Browsing by approval status

You can set the camera to browse by approval status, which means, for example, that you will see only green-status images as you browse a batch (or both green and yellow, or only red, etc.). The current filter setting is indicated on-screen, as illustrated. Filtered

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Hasselblad CF22 CF39 user manual Reading and changing the approval status, Browsing by approval status