Before you begin reading this post, be sure and click on the previous post that explains the elements that go into the EXPOSURE TRIANGLE. The post is called The Mystery of Manual Photography. It covers aperture, shutter speed, and ISO. This will help you understand and apply the exposure triangle theory.
Myrtle Beach Photography Website Blog
To understand exposure it is important to understand “The Exposure Triangle” and how ISO, shutter speed and aperture come together to effect each other. In order to maintain the “correct” exposure, any change in one element needs to be compensated with an opposite change in one of the other elements. By adjusting the shutter speed we can better freeze or express movement. By adjusting aperture we have play with depth of field thereby either highlighting a small element of our subject or expressing the grandness of our subject. But in doing so, we now know how to get back to that “correct” exposure! Once you start understanding exposure in this way you are well on your way to increasing your photography skills.
Saturday, February 9, 2013
Taking The Mystery Out Of Photography-Shooting Manual by Myrtle Beach Photography
Myrtle Beach Photography's Basics of Photography: Your Camera’s Manual Settings
The most difficult function of photography for me to grasp as an amateur photographer was manual mode. The three things we need to consider are the shutter speed, ISO, and aperture. These are the three things we need to understand before we can take the big leap from program to manual.
As you read the, grab your camera so you can follow along with your camera, be sure to set it into manual mode so you can access every setting.
The Mystery of Aperture
Aperture is often the most difficult concept for people to grasp when they're learning how their camera works, but it's pretty simple once you understand it. If you look at your lens, you can see the opening where light comes through. When you adjust your aperture settings, you'll see that opening get bigger and smaller. The larger the opening, or wider the aperture, the more light you let in with each exposure. For example, a narrow aperture is great for landscapes. A wider aperture means less of the photograph will be in focus, which is something that's generally visually pleasing and isn't seen as a downside. If you've seen photographs with a subject in focus and beautiful blurred backgrounds, this is often the effect of a wide aperture. Using a wide aperture is generally considered the best method for taking in more light because the downside—less of the photograph being in focus—is often a desired result.
Aperture is represented in f-stops. A lower number, like f/1.8, denotes a wider aperture, and a higher number, like f/22, denotes a narrower aperture. This is where I started to get confused. My confusion came because I did not understand that all lenses didn't do the same thing. For example, if you are shooting in low light, the lens that came with your camera is probably somewhere in the f/3.5 range. I knew my camera setting could go to say f/1.8 but with the lens on my camera only went as low as f3.5 so I was unable to set the camera any lower than the lowest range on my lens which was f3.5. When I finally figured this out, I ran up to my studio and borrowed a lens that was f1.8 and that is when I started to understand aperture.
The best thing to do to test this out is to borrow or rent a lens that goes to f1.8. I sat on my sofa with the lights off and took my f3.5 lens, set the aperture to the lowest possible setting for that lens. I propped the camera on my knees and focused on my bookshelf across the room. The shutter speed will come in later but simply, the higher the shutter speed, say 400 the faster the lens opens and closes allowing less light can get in. A high shutter speed is good for stopping action or blur. A lower shutter speed allows for more light because the lens stays open longer, but the longer the lens stays open, the more chance of blur. That is why you will need to prop the camera on your legs or use a tripod.
Lenses are often marked with their widest possible aperture. If you see a lens that is a 50mm f/1.8, this means it's widest aperture is f/1.8. The aperture can always be set to be more narrow, but it won't be able to go wider than f/1.8. Some lenses will have a range, such as f/3.5-5.6. You'll see this on zoom lenses, and it means that when the lens is zoomed out to the widest position it's f/3.5, but when it's zoomed in all the way it can only have an aperture as wide as f/5.6. The middle changes as well, so halfway through the zoom range you'll end up with a widest aperture of about f/4.5. An aperture range is common with less-expensive zoom lenses, but if you pay more you can get a standard aperture throughout the range.
Now, sitting in the dark with your f3.5 lens on, turn off your flash, set you shutter speed to around 100, set your aperture to f3.5 and take the shot. You will notice that the image is very dark because you are unable to get enough light into the camera. Next, put on your f1.8 lens and set your aperture to f1.8 with the same shutter speed and take the shot. You will notice that your image will appear much lighter. This is the magic of a low f-stop. Play around with the shutter speed as well. You will notice the same effects. As you raise your shutter speed, the less light will get in and the darker your image will appear. Now set your shutter speed to a lower setting (make sure you camera is mounted on your leg, a table or tripod so there is no movement and try again. You will see that now, the image will appear lighter.
That's pretty much all you need to know about aperture. The important thing to remember is that a wide aperture, like f/1.8, lets in more light and provides a shallow depth of field (meaning less of the photo appears in focus). A narrow aperture, like f/22, provides deeper focus but lets in less light. What aperture you should use depends on the situation and the type of lens you're using, so experiment to see what effects you get and you'll have a better idea of how your aperture setting affects your photographs.
Last we will discuss price. Generally, the lower the f-stop of the lens, the more expensive it is. Go to ebay and search canon lens 70-200mm f2.8 then search canon lens 70-200mm f4.0. You will notice the price is very different. The low f stop lens is around $2000 where the higher f-stop lens is almost $1000 less.
The Mystery of Shutter Speed
When you press the shutter button on your camera and take a picture, the aperture blades take a specific amount of time to close. This amount of time is known as your shutter speed. Generally it is a fraction of a second, and if you're capturing fast motion it needs to be at most 1/300th of a second. If you're not capturing any motion, you can sometimes get away with as long of an exposure as 1/30th of a second. When you increase your shutter speed—the length of time where the sensor is exposed to light—two important things happen.
First, the sensor is exposed to more light because it's been given more time. This is useful in low light situations. Second, the sensor is subject to more motion which causes motion blur. This can happen either because your subject is in motion or because you cannot hold the camera still. This is fine if you're photographing a landscape at night and the camera is placed on a tripod, as neither the camera nor your subject is going to move. On the other hand, slow shutter speeds pose a problem when you're shooting handheld and/or your subject is moving. This is why you wouldn't want a shutter speed any slower than 1/30th of a second when photographing handheld (unless you're known for your remarkably still hands).
In general, you want to use the fastest shutter speed you can but there are plenty of circumstances where you'd choose a slower shutter speed. Here are a few examples:
1. You want motion blur for artistic purposes, such as blurring a flowing stream while keeping everything else sharp and un-blurred. To accomplish this you'd use a slow shutter speed like 1/30th of a second and use a narrow aperture to prevent yourself from overexposing the photograph. Note: This example is a good reason to use the Shutter Priority shooting mode discussed in the previous lesson.
2. You want an overexposed and potentially blurred photograph for artistic purposes.
3. You're shooting in low light and it's necessary.
4. You're shooting in low light and it's not necessary, but you want to keep noise to a minimum. Therefore you set your ISO (film speed equivalent) to a low setting and you reduce your shutter speed to compensate (and let in more light).
These aren't the only reasons but a few common ones. The important thing to remember is a slow shutter speed means more light at the risk of motion blur. A fast shutter speed means low risk of motion blur while sacrificing light.
The Mystery of ISO
ISO is the digital equivalent (or approximation) of film speed. If you remember buying film for a regular camera, you'd get 100 or 200 for outdoors and 400 or 800 for indoors. The faster the film speed the more sensitive it is to light. All of this still applies to digital photography, but it's called an ISO rating instead.
The advantage of a low ISO is that the light in a given exposure is more accurately represented. If you've seen photos at night, the lights often look like they're much brighter and bleeding into other areas of the photo. This is the result of a high ISO—a greater sensitivity to light. High ISOs are particularly useful for picking up more detail in a dark photograph without reducing the shutter speed or widening the aperture more than you want to, but it comes at a cost. In addition to lights being overly and unrealistically bright in your photos, high ISO settings are the biggest contributors to photographic noise. High-end cameras will pick up less noise at higher ISOs than low-end cameras, but the rule is always the same: the higher you increase your ISO, the more noise you get.
Most cameras will set the ISO automatically, even in manual mode. Generally you can stick with the same ISO setting if your lighting situation doesn't change, so it's good to get used to setting it yourself. That said, sometimes lighting changes enough in dark, indoor settings that letting the camera set it for you automatically can be helpful—even when shooting manually.
Combining the Settings
In manual mode you set everything yourself (except ISO, if you set it to automatic), so you have to think about all three of these settings before you take a photograph. The best thing you can do make this easier on yourself is to give priority to one of the settings by deciding what's most important. Do you want to ensure a shallow depth of field? If so, your priority is your aperture. Do you want the most accurate representation of light? Make ISO your priority. Do you want to prevent as much motion blur as possible? Concentrate on shutter speed first. Once you know your priority, all you need to do is set the other settings to whatever is necessary to expose the right amount of light to the photograph.
In manual mode your camera should let you know if you're over- or under-exposed by providing a little meter at the bottom (pictured to the left). The left is underexposed and the right is overexposed. Your goal is to get the pointer in the middle. Once you do that, snap your photo, and it should look just how you want it.
All of this takes lots of practice so it becomes second nature. This is generally why we hire professional photographers. I know this sounds self serving but to be honest, I have been taking personal pictures of my children for years and this still does not come without great thought before pressing the button. I hope this has been helpful and remember to practice, practice, practice.
The most difficult function of photography for me to grasp as an amateur photographer was manual mode. The three things we need to consider are the shutter speed, ISO, and aperture. These are the three things we need to understand before we can take the big leap from program to manual.
As you read the, grab your camera so you can follow along with your camera, be sure to set it into manual mode so you can access every setting.
The Mystery of Aperture
Aperture is often the most difficult concept for people to grasp when they're learning how their camera works, but it's pretty simple once you understand it. If you look at your lens, you can see the opening where light comes through. When you adjust your aperture settings, you'll see that opening get bigger and smaller. The larger the opening, or wider the aperture, the more light you let in with each exposure. For example, a narrow aperture is great for landscapes. A wider aperture means less of the photograph will be in focus, which is something that's generally visually pleasing and isn't seen as a downside. If you've seen photographs with a subject in focus and beautiful blurred backgrounds, this is often the effect of a wide aperture. Using a wide aperture is generally considered the best method for taking in more light because the downside—less of the photograph being in focus—is often a desired result.
Aperture is represented in f-stops. A lower number, like f/1.8, denotes a wider aperture, and a higher number, like f/22, denotes a narrower aperture. This is where I started to get confused. My confusion came because I did not understand that all lenses didn't do the same thing. For example, if you are shooting in low light, the lens that came with your camera is probably somewhere in the f/3.5 range. I knew my camera setting could go to say f/1.8 but with the lens on my camera only went as low as f3.5 so I was unable to set the camera any lower than the lowest range on my lens which was f3.5. When I finally figured this out, I ran up to my studio and borrowed a lens that was f1.8 and that is when I started to understand aperture.
The best thing to do to test this out is to borrow or rent a lens that goes to f1.8. I sat on my sofa with the lights off and took my f3.5 lens, set the aperture to the lowest possible setting for that lens. I propped the camera on my knees and focused on my bookshelf across the room. The shutter speed will come in later but simply, the higher the shutter speed, say 400 the faster the lens opens and closes allowing less light can get in. A high shutter speed is good for stopping action or blur. A lower shutter speed allows for more light because the lens stays open longer, but the longer the lens stays open, the more chance of blur. That is why you will need to prop the camera on your legs or use a tripod.
Lenses are often marked with their widest possible aperture. If you see a lens that is a 50mm f/1.8, this means it's widest aperture is f/1.8. The aperture can always be set to be more narrow, but it won't be able to go wider than f/1.8. Some lenses will have a range, such as f/3.5-5.6. You'll see this on zoom lenses, and it means that when the lens is zoomed out to the widest position it's f/3.5, but when it's zoomed in all the way it can only have an aperture as wide as f/5.6. The middle changes as well, so halfway through the zoom range you'll end up with a widest aperture of about f/4.5. An aperture range is common with less-expensive zoom lenses, but if you pay more you can get a standard aperture throughout the range.
Now, sitting in the dark with your f3.5 lens on, turn off your flash, set you shutter speed to around 100, set your aperture to f3.5 and take the shot. You will notice that the image is very dark because you are unable to get enough light into the camera. Next, put on your f1.8 lens and set your aperture to f1.8 with the same shutter speed and take the shot. You will notice that your image will appear much lighter. This is the magic of a low f-stop. Play around with the shutter speed as well. You will notice the same effects. As you raise your shutter speed, the less light will get in and the darker your image will appear. Now set your shutter speed to a lower setting (make sure you camera is mounted on your leg, a table or tripod so there is no movement and try again. You will see that now, the image will appear lighter.
That's pretty much all you need to know about aperture. The important thing to remember is that a wide aperture, like f/1.8, lets in more light and provides a shallow depth of field (meaning less of the photo appears in focus). A narrow aperture, like f/22, provides deeper focus but lets in less light. What aperture you should use depends on the situation and the type of lens you're using, so experiment to see what effects you get and you'll have a better idea of how your aperture setting affects your photographs.
Last we will discuss price. Generally, the lower the f-stop of the lens, the more expensive it is. Go to ebay and search canon lens 70-200mm f2.8 then search canon lens 70-200mm f4.0. You will notice the price is very different. The low f stop lens is around $2000 where the higher f-stop lens is almost $1000 less.
The Mystery of Shutter Speed
When you press the shutter button on your camera and take a picture, the aperture blades take a specific amount of time to close. This amount of time is known as your shutter speed. Generally it is a fraction of a second, and if you're capturing fast motion it needs to be at most 1/300th of a second. If you're not capturing any motion, you can sometimes get away with as long of an exposure as 1/30th of a second. When you increase your shutter speed—the length of time where the sensor is exposed to light—two important things happen.
First, the sensor is exposed to more light because it's been given more time. This is useful in low light situations. Second, the sensor is subject to more motion which causes motion blur. This can happen either because your subject is in motion or because you cannot hold the camera still. This is fine if you're photographing a landscape at night and the camera is placed on a tripod, as neither the camera nor your subject is going to move. On the other hand, slow shutter speeds pose a problem when you're shooting handheld and/or your subject is moving. This is why you wouldn't want a shutter speed any slower than 1/30th of a second when photographing handheld (unless you're known for your remarkably still hands).
In general, you want to use the fastest shutter speed you can but there are plenty of circumstances where you'd choose a slower shutter speed. Here are a few examples:
1. You want motion blur for artistic purposes, such as blurring a flowing stream while keeping everything else sharp and un-blurred. To accomplish this you'd use a slow shutter speed like 1/30th of a second and use a narrow aperture to prevent yourself from overexposing the photograph. Note: This example is a good reason to use the Shutter Priority shooting mode discussed in the previous lesson.
2. You want an overexposed and potentially blurred photograph for artistic purposes.
3. You're shooting in low light and it's necessary.
4. You're shooting in low light and it's not necessary, but you want to keep noise to a minimum. Therefore you set your ISO (film speed equivalent) to a low setting and you reduce your shutter speed to compensate (and let in more light).
These aren't the only reasons but a few common ones. The important thing to remember is a slow shutter speed means more light at the risk of motion blur. A fast shutter speed means low risk of motion blur while sacrificing light.
The Mystery of ISO
ISO is the digital equivalent (or approximation) of film speed. If you remember buying film for a regular camera, you'd get 100 or 200 for outdoors and 400 or 800 for indoors. The faster the film speed the more sensitive it is to light. All of this still applies to digital photography, but it's called an ISO rating instead.
The advantage of a low ISO is that the light in a given exposure is more accurately represented. If you've seen photos at night, the lights often look like they're much brighter and bleeding into other areas of the photo. This is the result of a high ISO—a greater sensitivity to light. High ISOs are particularly useful for picking up more detail in a dark photograph without reducing the shutter speed or widening the aperture more than you want to, but it comes at a cost. In addition to lights being overly and unrealistically bright in your photos, high ISO settings are the biggest contributors to photographic noise. High-end cameras will pick up less noise at higher ISOs than low-end cameras, but the rule is always the same: the higher you increase your ISO, the more noise you get.
Most cameras will set the ISO automatically, even in manual mode. Generally you can stick with the same ISO setting if your lighting situation doesn't change, so it's good to get used to setting it yourself. That said, sometimes lighting changes enough in dark, indoor settings that letting the camera set it for you automatically can be helpful—even when shooting manually.
Combining the Settings
In manual mode you set everything yourself (except ISO, if you set it to automatic), so you have to think about all three of these settings before you take a photograph. The best thing you can do make this easier on yourself is to give priority to one of the settings by deciding what's most important. Do you want to ensure a shallow depth of field? If so, your priority is your aperture. Do you want the most accurate representation of light? Make ISO your priority. Do you want to prevent as much motion blur as possible? Concentrate on shutter speed first. Once you know your priority, all you need to do is set the other settings to whatever is necessary to expose the right amount of light to the photograph.
In manual mode your camera should let you know if you're over- or under-exposed by providing a little meter at the bottom (pictured to the left). The left is underexposed and the right is overexposed. Your goal is to get the pointer in the middle. Once you do that, snap your photo, and it should look just how you want it.
All of this takes lots of practice so it becomes second nature. This is generally why we hire professional photographers. I know this sounds self serving but to be honest, I have been taking personal pictures of my children for years and this still does not come without great thought before pressing the button. I hope this has been helpful and remember to practice, practice, practice.
Monday, February 4, 2013
Myrtle Beach Photography Tip: Taking Great Pictures at your Childs Sporting Event
Expensive camera equipment can make all the difference. My daughter is a level 9 gymnast and during gymnastics competitions, flash photography is not allowed. Having the right equipment for this type of situation is crucial. I used a Canon 1D Mark III with a 70 - 200mm F2.8 Canon Lens. Learning what your camera can do and having the equipment to do it is half the battle. These were taken last weekend during the TigerPaw Gymnastics meet in Clemson, SC. Tip of the day: purchase the right equipment, read your equipment manual and practice, practice, practice. Read other posts about action photography, sports photography and other helpful tips on Myrtle Beach Photography's Blogs and Facebook.
Background Clutter Tip by Myrtle Beach Photography
Our studio takes thousands of family beach portrait shots a summer. The biggest obstacle we run into is clutter. Everything from trash on the beach to people walking in the background when the beaches are busy. Even a small piece of trash or a cigarette butt can destroy an image. Clutter can turn a beautiful professional portrait into what can look like a snapshot. When setting up a portrait shot, consider simplifying the background to avoid photo clutter. Take the time to move things that can be a distraction. If you take a photo of someone in front of a busy background, when someone else looks at the picture their eyes will be pulled to the distractions.
Your photos should focus the viewer on the person, and only afterwards their surroundings. Instead of getting an entire beach scene in the photo, just get enough so the viewer knows the person is in front of ocean. Try and crop out any hotels or people walking by. You cannot get entire beach scene in a photo and still record the details of a person's face, so unless you are just going for the effect of comparing the person's size with the largeness of their surroundings, focus on one background detail and let the person's image fill most of the viewfinder. These small tips will save you hours in the graphic process if you are aware of your surroundings.
Photography Tip - Simple But Important
Here is a photography tip that is so simple that it is often overlooked. The crooked horizon. As many of you know, I am not a professional photographer but own a photography studio. My job is to correct mistakes, through photoshop, that come through my studio. I would guess that besides the obvious removing people from the background, removing stray hair, etc, straightening the horizon is way up there. When you set up to take a shot, especially on the beach where the horizon plays a very big part of the background, make sure the horizon is straight and not going through the head of your subject. This task is sometimes more difficult for taller photographers. Just take a moment before you click your shutter and make sure the horizon is below the head and that it is straight.
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