Welcome to the forum.
For seeing your histogram, you can include it in your displays by going to the setup menu >>> screen setup >>> disp. custom settings >>> (scroll waaaay down to get to) histogram. Check the box and save the settings. This will show the histogram in the evf. To see it on the lcd, you will to push the disp./back button to switch the lcd to the custom view.
Your other questions are more tricky to guess/answer. Is the maximum ISO for auto ISO set at a low limit? Beyond that, without being there on the scene and knowing what all the other shooting settings you used, any guess is just, a guess.
I keep my X-T1 on auto ISO. Yesterday I was trying to capture a heron at the beaver dam in our neighborhood wetlands. I use the viewfinder which doesn't show me the histogram (is there a setting for this that I'm missing?) but the exposure meter showed that it was exposed correctly.
The bird flew off and when I checked the display, the photos I took were so dark I couldn't see the scene at all (think shooting with your lens cap on).
The photos had been taken at ISO 800. So I have two questions, why did the exposure meter say everything was groovy when it wasn't, and why didn't it go above 800 in order to capture a correct exposure?
I shoot in raw and was able to save the photo in Lightroom.
Hi everyone, I've noticed that when I edit my pictures in Photoshop from Lightroom, some of the Fujifilm profiles are not applied, specifically Bleach Bypass and Sepia. I shoot with a GFX 50sii. It seems I'm not the only person with this problem, as I read this in a post on an Adobe forum:
https://community.adobe.com/t5/photoshop-ecosystem-discussions/photoshop-stripping-fuji-camera-profiles-from-lightroom-import/m-p/14414407?attachment-id=240572
Does anyone have any suggestions on how to solve this issue? TIA
It's interesting to me - When I want to shoot video in M mode, I set ISO (for example 500) and start video. But ISO switch itself to A ISO and set to 1000 or other values. What's going on?