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Exposure

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
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Exposure

Uploaded by

Avinash Reddy
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

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Exposure is the amount of light collected by the sensor in your camera


during a single picture.  If the shot is exposed too long the photograph will be washed out.  If the shot is exposed
too short the photograph will appear too dark.  Almost all cameras today have light meters which measure the
light in the given shot and set an ideal exposure automatically.
Most people  depend on the light meter which is fine, but if  you know how to control your exposures you can
get some creative and sometimes better pictures.  (The photo on the left is with low shutter speed and narrow
aperture (high f/stop).

The two primary controls your camera uses for exposure are shutter speed (the amount of time the sensor is
exposed to light) and aperture (the size of the lens opening that lets light into the camera).  Shutter speeds are
measured in seconds and more commonly fractions of a second. (1/2000 of a second is very fast and 8′ seconds
is extremely slow).  Apertures are measured in something called f/stops (a very wide aperture is f/2.8 and a very
small aperture is f/19).

You might wonder why there is not just a constant shutter speed or a
constant aperture so that you would only have to worry about one control.  The reason is that even though they
both control the amount of light getting to the sensor they also control other aspects of the picture.  Shutter
speed for example can be used to freeze subjects in midair with a fast speed or it can be used to blur water with
a slow speed.
Aperture controls the depth-of-field which is what is in focus in the picture.  Aperture can be used to draw
attention to one subject (like the flower on the right) by blurring the background with a wide aperture (low
f/stop).  Aperture can also be used to focus everything in a picture with a narrow aperture (high f/stop).  (The
photo on the left is with Wide aperture (low f/stop) and corresponding shutter speed).
Low shutter speed and slightly narrow aperture (pretty high f/stop)

On most digital SLR’s (Single Lens Reflex) cameras today you can even change the sensitivity of the sensor
when collecting light which is called the ISO speed.  The common span of ISO speed is 100 to 800.  The higher
the ISO speed the faster the camera collects light but it also adds more noise to the photograph than the lower
speeds.

For example if your trying to take pictures in dim light without a tripod you might want to raise the ISO speed in
order to get a picture that’s not blurry.  Most of the time you should keep it at a lower ISO speed if there is
enough light, but it makes a big difference when there isn’t.

The best way to learn how to use shutter speed and aperture is to just keep experimenting with them.

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