Home arrow Photography arrow Get The Most Out Of Your Camera (Part 2)
Sunday, 01 August 2010
Main Menu
Home
Candle Making
Painting
Photography
Scrapbooking
Sewing and Quilting
Soap Making
Other Crafts
Craft Business
Bonsai Basics
Hobbies at the Hobby Hideout
Search
     
Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
Contact Us
WebLinks
SiteMap
     
Submit an Article
Submission Guidelines
     
More Hideouts
Hobby Cove
For all your hobbies, supplies and needs, visit HobbyCove.com!
Get The Most Out Of Your Camera (Part 2) PDF Print E-mail
User Rating: / 0
PoorBest 
Written by TJ Tierney   
Thursday, 23 February 2006
Lets add motion to our images.

In part 1 of: Get the most out of your camera, we looked at how to use the aperture and the creative uses of depth-of-field. In this part we’ll look at how to use the shutter button on your camera and how both the shutter and the aperture control exposure.

The shutter is a mechanical device that controls the length of time that light is allowed to act on the film.

Most standard cameras allow us to use a range between 16 second and 1/1000 second. You might be wondering, why anyone would use a long shutter time of 16 seconds: I’ve used this and even longer shutter times when taken lowlight landscape images. I would always advise the use of a tripod with these long exposures time to avoid blur images.

Using a shutter speed of 1/125 second should safely avoid overall blur due to camera movement if you hold the camera by hand. Any longer shutter time should require a tripod.

Each time you open the shutter by one, we double the light, when we close down the light by one we half the light. Open the shutter at 1 second allows twice the light as that of a ½ second.

The shutter can also be used creatively when taking landscape images or sport images. If you want to add motion to your image a slow shutter speed can give an image an extra bit of sway. No more so than taking images of streams. Using a slow shutter speed when photographing water will cause the water to blur, resulting with the image expressing motion.

By contrast, a fast shutter speed of 1/250 would be used in shooting wildlife or where the subject that you’re shooting needs to be still and sharp. Most wildlife photographers would use a fast shutter speed.

By using the shutter and aperture together we control exposure. Both allow light to enter the camera: the shutter by time and the aperture by the size of the hole in the lens.

For example: you’re shooting a landscape scene; you get an exposure reading at f/11 at ¼ second. You know that by using f/11 that the entire image wont be sharp. You want to shoot at f/22, which is four times less light than f/11. You need to quadruple the light through time; each time you open the shutter by one you double the light, so open it by two stops and your exposure time will be 1 second. Your final exposure should read f/22 at 1 second.

At the best of times, calculating the correct exposure can be a difficult task, but with a few simple tips our images can produce eye-catching colours that we see all around us every day.

TJ Tierney. Award winning Irish Landscape photographer. If you are looking for more photo tips visit http://www.goldenirishlight.com/photographytips.html To view some of his images visit his on line gallery @ http://www.goldenirishlight.com.

Last Updated ( Friday, 13 July 2007 )
 
Site Search
ScrapbookBay
For all your scrapbooking supplies and needs, visit ScrapbookBay.com!
Search Google
Google

Copyright © 2006-2010 Craft Hideout and ASY Holdings. All rights reserved.