photography – shutter
Tags:camera, lesson, lesson tutorial, Photography, photography lesson, shutter, speed, Tutorial,
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Photography lesson. Tutorial about regulating a shiver in your camera. More report during www.BestPhotoLessons.com.
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it`s very interesting and all, but i`m studying photography with a Nikon D40. i`d like to know how to adjust shutter speeds and aperture — ISO settings to improve my shots. like, mine come out rather dark and misty. i`d like a better exposure and highlight without having to edit them. please message me.
Actually, yes, it is about taste and how you interpret the world around you. That’s what makes it art. Use the tools such as shutter speed and aperture to refine the picture into how you want to show what you see.
Some people feel that slowing the shutter speed on waterfalls,creeks,waves etc. makes the image look too unnatural. Many prefer to capture nature as it really is.
All a matter of taste I guess…..
By either setting the ISO on the camera on a higher setting, or simply shooting with plenty of light available.
they probably use large aperture then )
good video, but just one question, i see some great shots of action photography and i know they will be taken with very fast shutter speeds, so how do they do that without the photo getting dark?
Sweet and informative. thanks
incredibly helpful!!!!!!
Exactly what I needed to hear thanks!
Excellent explanation – just what i needed. Thanks
Thanks ! [:)]
Hassleblad !!! Wow…that freaking expensive cam u got there! Thank you again for ur tips and tricks …basic stuff that everyone should know before touching and camera ! Cheers
Great and informative videos. I inherited a camera, so I’m trying to get started taking photographs. Finding these vids really helpful.
Please keep ‘em coming!
yeah, great stuff. photography for dummies
Thanks for the comment. And yes, you’d want a pretty slow shutter speed. At least a couple of seconds (which would give short “bursts of light” – 20 to 50 feet long depending on how fast the cars were going) to around 15 or more seconds to get long ribbons of light.
great video, i just got one question
if i were to take a picture of the back of traffic and i want a stream of the red lights from the tail of the car would i make the shutter speed slow?
dude, you rock
Thank you for your time.
really helpful
Jeez, this is great. Thanks for taking the time to explain this. I’m brand new to photography and this really helps.
Thanks :]
It’s so much easier to hear it from you than read this in a manual. I read it, but I didn’t quite get it. I understand fast & slow, but I didn’t understand the full concept of it, so thank you for taking the time ot make this video.
There is a a post on the bestphotolessons dot com forum you can check out. (not enough room here to post a proper answer.)
Can you explain watt seconds?
thanks
thanks