Digital photography - Shutter Speed
Basics
I’m sure you know that one of the most
important key elements to getting beautifully clear and
artistic photos is firstly knowing and having a sense of the
artistic. This is a very important aspect you need in order to
refine your digital photography. The secret really is,
combining your natural artistic flare with some precise
technical knowledge…explained in laymen’s terms. So I’m going
to start you off with some good, solid tips about shutter
speed, aperture, exposure, how blur can work well (not the
accidental type!) and what camera you can use to get goods
results in your digital photography.
Shutter speed is one of the first things in digital
photography that you must know if you want to excel your skills
and get beautiful digital photos. Your shutter speed controls
the amount of light coming in to the digital sensor. The speed
at with you get your light exposure can really make or break
your digital photography.
In basic terms to help you understand, shutter speed
controls light exposure. Think of it like a door opening and
closing fast or slow. How fast or slow is opens and shuts again
has impact on your light exposure onto the digital sensor. The
shutter controls the amount of light coming in to the camera
via its speed. The shutter can then make your pictures brighter
or darker. Shutter speeds can also impact the clarity of a
moving object for example. You can create shutter speeds that
are fast, giving a ‘suspended in mid air’ kind of look. Think
of the motion of a fast moving object that’s been suspended in
“mid-air” such as a water droplet for example. Shots like this
have a fast shutter speed.
So what sort of shutter speeds do you need for a look like
this? A good “freeze motion” shot where something looks
suspended in time, may be at a shutter speed of 1/2000 just as
an example. That means the shutter has opened and closed so
fast that you can’t replicate it in sound or description. The
shutter has clicked in 2000th of a second. That’s how a lot of
sports photography is done. Many subjects that move very fast
can look really good with a fast shutter speed.
Shutter speeds of babies and kids for example have to be
taken pretty fast….unless they’re asleep of course. You need a
pretty high shutter speed of babies and kids because in
photographic terms they move around so fast! I’ve never been
more tired after a day of shooting photos of kids and babies.
You have to be on your toes because a potentially great photo
is gone in an instant of a second, so you have to watch them
like a hawk.
On the other hand you can get blurry images using shutter
speed effects manipulation. Shutter speeds and artistic blur
can work quite nicely together. For example if you want to
create that artistic blurred look, (not the accidental smudge
look) then some gentle blur in your photos can look beautiful.
This involves some adjusting of the shutter speed to get the
right look for your shot. I would call it a smudging effect if
you want to get technical. You may take the same photo of the
kids running, but set the shutter speed exposure to something
around the 1/250 or less for example. This range of f stops may
create a really nice, soft blur with these shutter speed
effects.
Aperture on the other hand is described as F stops. The
higher the number f stop, the smaller the opening of the lens
and the less light falls on the imager. For example, you may
find that a dusk sunset shot is rather beautiful and you want
to capture the colours as you see them. You may decide to
manually change the aperture, or f stop, and open up the lens
and let more light in. You may find that on auto your camera
has chosen an f stop of F8. You look at the scene on the
viewfinder and you find it’s just a little dark for your
liking. You then switch the camera to a manual mode and change
it to F4, which you find lets more light in and gives you the
shot you want. Remember, the higher the F stop number, the less
light comes in. The lower the number, the more light comes
in.
Shutter speed and aperture in your digital photography must
work together closely to create the right blend of effect in
your photo. So just try it. Play around with moving objects on
different shutter speeds and you’ll see what I mean about the
different types of effects you can get.
So what digital cameras can you have complete shutter speed
and aperture control over?
Digital Slrs are by far better as far as controlling the
amount of light that comes onto your sensor. It’s a little hard
to get this control with an ordinary point-and shoot- digital
camera because you can’t control the shutter speed or aperture
independently. On a prosumer camera it’s bit better because you
can change the exposure value, but still, you can’t change the
shutter speed alone.
Although on a prosumer, you may have a reading called “E/V”.
An “e/v number” is really a measurement of the cameras
combination between aperture and shutter speed. I don’t have
time to go into great explanation now but
if you can change the exposure value or “e/v” you have a little
more scope than the point and shoot digital camera. You can
still experiment pretty well if you have one of these digital
cameras. However a single lens reflex digital camera is the
ideal. It allows you to control the shutter speed alone,
independently, without affecting the adjustment of the
aperture.
To summarise, you can get beautifully artistic shots by
having a sense of what works intuitively, then couple that with
a good sense of photographic technical knowledge and you are
well on your way! So start with trying out different shutter
speeds first and then move on to aperture, then try both.
By Amy Renfrey - Digital
photograpy success
|