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There are three absolute basics of photography... ISO, aperture and shutter speed. Combining these three in various ways will be the absolute basics of your photos. Let's break it down. ISO is a measurement which applies to film and represents the films sensitivity to light. It can go as low as 50, and keeps doubling up (next is 100, then 200, continuing to 400 etc) and reaches very high numbers. Low ISO is less sensitive to light. High ISO is more sensitive to light.
- In dark areas such as indoors with dim lighting a high ISO number is needed because high ISO is more sensitive to light.
- In bright areas such as outdoor in sunlight, a low ISO will be sufficient. Low ISO is less sensitive to light.
- In dark areas you can have a high aperture (low number). Meaning you are letting in as much light as possible.
- In bright areas you can have a low aperture (high number). Meaning you are letting in less
light.
second, usually from 1/4000 of a second all the way up to 30 seconds. Some cameras will let you
click and hold the camera button leaving the length of time up to you. This setting is called«bulb».
Conclusion: If you are in a dark area you need more light, therefore you have to set the camera to a slow shutter speed. In bright areas, you can have a faster shutter speed.
Final conclusion: By playing around with these three basic settings in your camera, you will be able
to make bright areas look dark and dark areas look bright and everything in between.
More tips, tricks and hopefully non-complicated explanations.
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