The Sunny 16 Rule...a must read for beginners and intermediates alike

fotojack

Senior Member
The Sunny 16 Rule

F16 explains ISO

Describing ISO using the f16 rule is a beginner photographer’s rite of passage. If you are able to teach another person about ISO using the f16 rule, you are officially no longer a beginner and can consider yourself promoted to knowledgeable hobbyist. Once you fully understand the f16 rule, all other factors in the exposure equation fall nicely into place.

Why is it important

Fully understanding exposure and how your camera works will open untold possibilities in photography that would otherwise be unavailable. Your technical and creative skills will improve exponentially. The f16 rule is the key that unlocks the door to photography’s hidden garden of beauty. Understanding this will give you many years of development and personal satisfaction as a photographer.

The f16 Rule

The f16 or Sunny 16 Rule states that, on a bright sunny day at noon with your aperture set to f16, the reciprocal of the ISO setting is the correct shutter speed. If the ISO is set to 100, your shutter speed should be 1/100 or as near as you can get to 1/100. At ISO 200 the shutter speed should be 1/200. At ISO 400 the shutter speed should be 1/400 and so on. It is a rule that you should have locked permanently in your brain.

JPG Only

The ISO 2720:1974 standard applies to your camera’s exposure meter and how it measures light. The ISO standard for translating this metered light into image brightness via your camera sensor is ISO 12232:2006. This standard only applies if you save your image as a jpg. There are no ISO standards for RAW files which means that you may get considerable variation in exposure from camera to camera in RAW files shot at the same exposure settings. This also explains, in part, why, when you open a RAW file in editing software on your computer, it can look very different from the jpg that you see on the back of the camera.

Same rule anywhere in the world

The f16 rule applies everywhere in the world. It is a universal constant because it relates to the intensity of light coming from the sun. If, on a clear, bright sunny day at noon, you are freezing at the top of mount Kilimanjaro or melting in Death Valley you can still rely on the f16 rule to get a good exposure. Wherever you take you camera you can be sure that the f16 rule will be your reliable standard with two notable exceptions.

Two Notable Exceptions

Because snow, sand (glass) and water reflect sunlight, the f16 rule becomes the f22 rule when the ground is covered in snow or you are at the beach. This is only because the reflected light doubles the amount of light available on your subject equating to an increase of one stop of light.

It’s a starting point

By using the f16 rule as a starting point we can work out several other exposure values even when the sun is not shining. With some experience and study you will be equipped to shoot in almost any lighting scenario without using an exposure meter.

Chart

In the scenarios shown in the chart below, the rule continues to apply. At each of the aperture settings the shutter speed should match the reciprocal of the ISO
Aperture Lighting Scenario
f/22 Layer of Snow or at The Beach, Sunny Day
f/16 Sunny Day at Noon
f/11 Slightly Overcast
f/8 Overcast
f/5.6 Storm Clouds
f/4 Open Shade / Sunset

It Is Part Of Your Camera

The f16 rule is designed right into your camera as part of adhering to ISO standards. Try it out the first chance you can get. Use the chart above and check your results against the same images shot using camera controlled exposure as in Aperture Priority. See if you can improve upon your very expensive and highly specified masterpiece of engineering; your camera.
 

Mike150

Senior Member
Thanks Jack. I can't begin to tell you how many times I've read about Sunny 16 and still continue to forget about it. Can you spell C-R-S ?
 

Horoscope Fish

Senior Member
I think I still have one of these in my camera bag on a laminated 3 x 5 note card.


sunny-16-rule1.jpg
 

RockyNH_RIP

Senior Member
The Sunny 16 Rule

F16 explains ISO

It Is Part Of Your Camera

The f16 rule is designed right into your camera as part of adhering to ISO standards. Try it out the first chance you can get. Use the chart above and check your results against the same images shot using camera controlled exposure as in Aperture Priority. See if you can improve upon your very expensive and highly specified masterpiece of engineering; your camera.

Jack, thanks for sharing that information!! It all makes sense, just need to commit it to memory... I like the idea of a card in my camera bag, I may looking into making one..\

Pat in NH
 

Roy1961

Senior Member
Contributor
or do what i do with useful info pat, take a picture of it with your phone, i have a good few of these stored in mine.

Thanks for the info Jack and Horoscope Fish
 

Eye-level

Banned
Sunny 16 is great!

After you have used it a whole lot it comes as natural as riding a bike and you don't need any card.

I highly recommend it for one who is serious about photography. Ween yourself off of the meter a bit and try sunny 16. With some success nothing will help your confidence better than being able to say I shot that without any help from my camera.
 

fotojack

Senior Member
Jack, thanks for sharing that information!! It all makes sense, just need to commit it to memory... I like the idea of a card in my camera bag, I may looking into making one..\

Pat in NH

Pat...right click on Horoscope Fish's picture and Save It As....now you have your own picture. :) Resize it to any size you want.
 

Horoscope Fish

Senior Member
or do what i do with useful info pat, take a picture of it with your phone, i have a good few of these stored in mine.
GAH! Now why has that never occurred to me?

Pat...right click on Horoscope Fish's picture and Save It As....now you have your own picture. :) Resize it to any size you want.
I cropped it down to just the table on the bottom half. Widescreens nicely on my phone that way.
 

AxeMan - Rick S.

Senior Member
​RULES + RULES + "SWEET SPOT" = CONFUSION

I'm sure I'm about to confuse everyone with this but here goes.

Sunny 16 - At noon on a sunny day I should be shooting f/16 ISO 100 1/100 of a second.

When shooting a moving object your shutter speed should be at LEAST twice the length of your lens.

So if my thinking is right, if I'm using a 200mm lens and shooting a moving object on a sunny day at noon and I'm trying to follow the "Sunny 16 Rule" my setting should be:

f/16
ISO 500 (I threw in an extra 100 because the minimum of my lens doubled is 400 and I want to stop motion)
1/500

Is my thinking so far correct? If so next part of the question

Now on average the 'Sweet Spot" on most lens is around f/5.6 and f/8 which is completely out of range in the "Sunny 16 Rule" So how could I achieve the "Sunny 16 Rule" at a lower aperture?

I been thinking about this all day and here is what I came up with

f/8
ISO 250 (200)
1/1000

Correct?
 

fotojack

Senior Member
​RULES + RULES + "SWEET SPOT" = CONFUSION

I'm sure I'm about to confuse everyone with this but here goes.

Sunny 16 - At noon on a sunny day I should be shooting f/16 ISO 100 1/100 of a second.

When shooting a moving object your shutter speed should be at LEAST twice the length of your lens.

So if my thinking is right, if I'm using a 200mm lens and shooting a moving object on a sunny day at noon and I'm trying to follow the "Sunny 16 Rule" my setting should be:

f/16
ISO 500 (I threw in an extra 100 because the minimum of my lens doubled is 400 and I want to stop motion)
1/500

Is my thinking so far correct? If so next part of the question

Now on average the 'Sweet Spot" on most lens is around f/5.6 and f/8 which is completely out of range in the "Sunny 16 Rule" So how could I achieve the "Sunny 16 Rule" at a lower aperture?

I been thinking about this all day and here is what I came up with

f/8
ISO 250 (200)
1/1000

Correct?

Correct.

The Sunny 16 Rule basically applies to "still" subjects. Shooting moving subjects varies the formula slightly, depending on the speed of the subject being shot. Usually trial and error applies.
 

Akozub

Senior Member
Let's not forget the "looney 11" rule for taking photos of the moons surface at night. Same idea as the Sunny 16 rule but set aperture at 11.
 
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