Camera Dojo
Now Playing
Photography Basics: Controlling Exposure |
|
We are beginning a series we are going to call photography basics to help explore the basics of digital photography. While the focus is on digital photography, all of the concepts will apply whether you are shooting film or digital. In this first installment we are going to look at how to control exposure by manipulating the different settings on the camera such as ISO, Shutter, and Aperture. Upcoming installments will focus on other areas such as depth of field, motion control, and specific shooting scenarios. What is exposure? Under Exposed Image Over Exposed Image How to control exposure
We will look at these settings in more detail to see exactly how the play together later. First, you need to start thinking of light in terms of “stops”. A stop is not an exact amount of light, it is a relative amount of light, each stop of light doubles the amount of light. For example, if we have a single lightbulb as our base light source, adding a second lightbulb (doubling the amount of light) increases the light by one stop. If want to increase the light by another stop we have to again double the amount of light to four lightbulbs. Understanding this is going to be the key to understanding how the different camera settings affect our exposure. ISO Speed Each time you double the ISO speed you increase the exposure by one stop, so ISO 400 will give you one stop of exposure more than ISO 200, and ISO 800 will give you one more stop over ISO 400 etc. Some cameras have some in-between ISO settings to provide a finer level of control. You currently see high ISO performance as being a major selling point for new DSLR cameras as this allows them to shoot in lower light conditions with less noise. Pro: Higher ISO allows shooting in lower light conditions High ISO Digital Noise Aperture So besides letting in more or less light, what does the aperture actually do? The more light that comes in at a particular shutter speed, the shallower the depth of field. If you want more depth of field you use a smaller (higher number) aperture setting. Pro: Larger apertures allow more light in and thus allow shooting in lower light conditions Shallow Depth of Field Deep Depth of Field Shutter Sometimes a little blur can help portray movement and action, a sharp bike rider with a blurred background will make the rider look like he/she is moving fast where a tack sharp image shows no motion at all and would make the same image look boring. While blurring on other images can ruin the image. Pro: The right shutter speed can really make an image more dramatic. Fast shutter speeds can freeze action, slow shutter speeds can add a dramatic motion blur. Fast Shutter Speed Slow Shutter Speed Summary Author |
|
Subscribe & Follow
Average Rating
Categories
- Arts
- Business
- Comedy
- Culture
- Education
- Entertainment
- Gaming
- General
- International
- Lifestyle & GLBT
- Music
- Religion
- Sports
- Technology
- Travel
- Health & Science
- News & Politics
- Show All






