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Learning
Photography Q&A
Long exposure shots are washed out
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<blockquote data-quote="Fred Kingston" data-source="post: 712844" data-attributes="member: 10742"><p>You'll need a neutral density filter to do what you want. You can't just shoot at a slower speed without adjusting the exposure/aperture to compensate for the amount of light, and closing your lens' aperture down to the smallest aperture probably still lets too much light in and over-exposes the image.</p><p></p><p>A Neutral Density filter will add from 4 to 10+ stops of negative-exposure to your equation...</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Fred Kingston, post: 712844, member: 10742"] You'll need a neutral density filter to do what you want. You can't just shoot at a slower speed without adjusting the exposure/aperture to compensate for the amount of light, and closing your lens' aperture down to the smallest aperture probably still lets too much light in and over-exposes the image. A Neutral Density filter will add from 4 to 10+ stops of negative-exposure to your equation... [/QUOTE]
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Photography Q&A
Long exposure shots are washed out
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