
Longer shutter speeds = more light
shorter shutter speeds = less light
The Aperture:
Smaller F-stops numbers = larger openings
larger openings = more light
brightness is reduced as light passes through an aperture.
Shutter Speed:
Determines HOW LONG the shutter stays open.
The longer exposures ( like 1 second ) give much more light to the film than a 1/1000 of a second exposure. So even though the number may look bigger, don't be deceived!
Examples:
A half second exposure is ONE STOP darker than a one second exposure.
A 1/125 exposure is TWO STOPS brighter than a 1/500 exposure.A 1/1000 exposure is THREE STOPS darker than a 1/125 exposure.Aperture Settings (F-Stops):
Like the pupil in a human eye, the aperture on a camera controls light.It does so by closing up to restrict light, and opening up to let it through.
Examples:
moving from f/16 to f/8 is:
TWO STOPS brighter.
moving from f/5.6 to f/8 is:
ONE STOP darker
moving from f/4 to f/2.8 is:
ONE STOP brighter
Balancing Shutter and Aperture:Exposure is about different combinations of shutter and f-stop settings. These combinations can drastically affect the finished picture. For example, the following three pictures have been given an equal amount of light, but the f-stop and shutter combinations make each one unique.Why is the background all blurred in the right picture, and sharpest in the left ? Because if the exposure is made with a wide aperture ( like f2.8 ), then objects farther away from the subject are thrown farther out of focus. This effect is referred to as "depth of field"
So.. if the aperture is small (like f22) then objects in the background (and foreground ) will appear sharper. However, since more light was required to make the exposure on the left ( 1/4 Second ) the subjects became blurred from MOTION. At 1/250th of a second, the shutter is fast enough to freeze motion.
Stops are interchangable
Aperture, shutter, and film settings are all divided up into "stops", even though the numbering systems are different.
The following chart shows common exposure settings. For the sake of example, the default "exposure" is set to 1/125, f8, ISO100. Don't worry about the numbers for now, because one step = one stop, regardless of which setting you move.
For example:
125 f/5.6 ASA100 is as bright as:
250 f/4 ASA100 which is as bright as:
500 f/4 ASA200
Too much light and the picture will be washed out. Not enough light and the picture will be too dark. A good photograph depends on calculating the exposure settings that will give the film the "right" amount of exposure.
The photographer can control how much natural light reaches film
by adjusting the camera's shutter, aperture, or film speed.
Measuring light (technical exposure)
A good technical exposure will produce a final image that accurately represents the original scene.. Film is light sensitive, and if the exposure is too dark or too bright, the result will not look like "real life".
