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Understanding the art and science of exposure in digital photography involves three main settings on your camera (which is probably a digital SLR, or dSLR): aperture, shutter speed, and ISO. Adjusting these interrelated settings will alter the look of your photos, and when you understand how these settings work, you'll
On a sunny day and with ISO 100 film / setting in the camera, one sets the aperture to f/16 and the shutter speed to 1100 or 1125 second (on some cameras 1125 second is the available setting nearest to 1100 second). On a sunny day with ISO 200 film / setting and aperture at f/16, set shutter speed to 1200 or 1250.
I have a Nikon D300 set on manual and used LO 1 which should be equivalent to ISO 100; my shutter speed was then set to 1/100; aperature was f16. It was a bright sunny day and the exposure was good; just ever so slightly underexposed compared to the camera's choice of 1/80 at f16 on aperature priority. I then moved
Feb 20, 2013 This rule is a good starting point to work from, though you'll likely have to adjust the settings to find which ones are best for your camera and conditions. I love shooting in the sun, partly because sunny days are too special to pass up, and don't forget one of the best things about sunlight: the bright blue sky
Apr 10, 2012 One advantage to "Sunny 16" is your image will always have great depth of field, which is perfect if you're photographing landscapes on a bright sunny day. Are you visiting the Grand Canyon on a bright sunny day? No problem! Not only will your image be properly exposed, you'll have incredible detail and
What this means is if you're shooting a landscape or a portrait of your cocker spaniel, for that matter, on a sunny day with your camera's ISO set to 100, the correct density of each of these exposure variations of the original f/16 formula will remain identical regardless of your final choice of f/stop and shutter speed settings.
When you are photographing during the sunniest part of the day you are combating two major issues: The first is overexposure and the second is harsh shadows. First, let's tackle overexposure. Overexposure occurs when too much light gets into your camera and washes out your photo. To combat overexposure, it's best to
Oct 26, 2012 The basic rule of thumb states that if you have a clear, sunny day and your aperture is at f/16, whatever ISO you are using, your shutter speed will be the reciprocal First of all, the Sunny 16 Rule is a good way to check if your camera is spot on with exposure or does it consistently under or over expose.
The sunny 16 rule works like this: On a clear and sunny day, at an aperture of F/16, you will get a correct exposure if you use a shutter speed that's the inverse of the ISO speed you're using. The second part is probably the one that's confusing you (if any of it is).
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