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SteveElms73
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Usually underexposing an image will increase saturation somewhat. You could then edit back in some exposure to the areas you want to maintain the detail. This is a great example of a time where exposure bracketing would work well. It's still a great shot though!
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RainGearRight
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Once the date is on the photo it's on there. Like hobby dog said it should be an option in the menu to turn it off. A quick Easy fix would be to crop the photo so that the date doesn't show. Nice photo!
Edit: cropping would ruin the mirror effect of the sun set.
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butthead
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Refer to page 59 of the manual, Inserting the Date and Time, to turn the date stamp off. You will just need to edit out the stamp on existing photos.
butthead
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hobbydog
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There has to be a menu option to turn it off. Probably under the tools icon. You can always clone it out like I did here and add a little saturation. I could do more if I had a full size picture.
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mocha
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took this sunset photo on a recent trip to Cache Bay. i use a canon a2200 powershot with 14.1 mp. was pressing buttons and now i can't the date to disappear.
no flash used taking this or the many others. the colors of the sunset were much more brilliant than the photo shows. any ideas?
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