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Nikonites
New Member Introductions
Hello from Nor. Cal.
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<blockquote data-quote="Essence of Imagery" data-source="post: 5952" data-attributes="member: 920"><p>Once you get comfortable with changing your ISO, Shutter Speed and Aperture, then you'll be amazed at what you can produce.</p><p>Just like the "fire triangle" of heat, fuel and oxygen - the process of taking a picture has a triangle.</p><p></p><p>ISO - how sensitive your "film"(sensor) is to light - the lower the number, the lower the sensitivity.</p><p>Aperture - how much light the lens lets in. - the lower the number, the more light it lets in.</p><p>Shutter Speed - how LONG the light gets in. Usually measured in fractions of a second (1/xxxx) the lower "xxxx" is, the slower the shutter speed.</p><p></p><p>How you assemble your triangle determines how the image turns out.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Essence of Imagery, post: 5952, member: 920"] Once you get comfortable with changing your ISO, Shutter Speed and Aperture, then you'll be amazed at what you can produce. Just like the "fire triangle" of heat, fuel and oxygen - the process of taking a picture has a triangle. ISO - how sensitive your "film"(sensor) is to light - the lower the number, the lower the sensitivity. Aperture - how much light the lens lets in. - the lower the number, the more light it lets in. Shutter Speed - how LONG the light gets in. Usually measured in fractions of a second (1/xxxx) the lower "xxxx" is, the slower the shutter speed. How you assemble your triangle determines how the image turns out. [/QUOTE]
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Nikonites
New Member Introductions
Hello from Nor. Cal.
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