In this videography vlog, Cristina takes you though the manual settings on your camera. Face your fear and learn to use the manual settings! She also demonst…
In this videography vlog, Cristina takes you though the manual settings on your camera. Face your fear and learn to use the manual settings! She also demonst…
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Why should you use manual over A priority or S priority? It seems to me that in most situations, only the aperture or the shutter speed matter at one time, and the other settings just need to be adjusted to accommodate for that.
I think a good starting point for beginners is the “sunny f/16” rule, which teaches you sooo much about light and exposure!
(just look up sunny 16 Rule on wikipedia!)
O Sweet Potato Cakes!
Thanks! I didn’t know that the aperture controlled the blurriness.
Brilliant. Thanks 🙂
Basically you want to keep your subject properly lit while more or less ignoring any bright lights since they’ll be blown out anyway. Keep in mind also that your aperture range decreases the more you zoom, so getting close to the subject and shooting wide angle will give you the option for a much brighter image than shooting on a telephoto from half a mile away. Also the shorter the focal length of your lens the wider the depth of field so more of the image will be sharp.
In a concert situation your distance from your subject is going to affect a lot of what you can get away with. You’ll want to set your shutter first to make sure action isn’t too blurry (2 x focal length is a good rule of thumb you can fudge a bit on to avoid blur at distance) So if you’re on a 50mm lens 100 shutter should be about right. Next set your aperture based on distance for wide shots you’ll want higher (5 or 6) for tight shots you can use a 1.8 or 2. Then adjust your iso accordingly.
Figured I should add on caveat for anyone shooting video. In general when shooting video on a DSLR you want to make sure you keep your shutter speed at least double your frame rate. Most video enabled DSLR’s these days shoot at 24p by default so you’d want to have at least a shutter of 48 or you get a high risk of a rolling shutter effect. This is less important shooting a relatively static subject like our blogger here but if you’re moving the camera your image can turn to jello.
Love the hat. Very good summary, digital cameras, automatic settings and Photoshop have almost destroyed the true photo-artist.
With those teeth, those cracked lips and an inch thick layer of makeup?
Are you kidding, or blind?
She is so cute
Great video!
I’ve taken 3 college semesters of photography and you’ve explained it a lot easier than my teacher.
As someone who has studied photography I can say that you really are very clear at explaining this. I’d just like to remind people that if you do use a slower shutterspeed you need to have steady hands or use a tripod – particularly if you have a heavier camera – using a timer can also help, as when you press the button to snap the picture you move the camera slightly. Great video!
Since it is near Halloween what type of camera equipment/settings would your recommend for those of us who do Paranormal investigations?
Any suggestions for shooting at concerts?
Low-light ambient (but strong backlights on stage), long focal length and with movement? Usually set it to “sports/action” mode, but I either get super blurry nothing or crazy over-exposed light patterns blocking people OR it’s really noisey…
Gotta love them sexy, sexy desserts.
THANK YOU.
Thank you so much! This was really great information wise and you were super clear. 🙂
I could literally listen to you talk about this for hours, you are very good at explaining the situations and options and I wish you were a teacher….. :'(
I took some photo classes in college and have been using slr and dslr cameras for my own amateur hobby photography over the last ten years. Your videos are like a refresher course. I’ve honestly been in a photo slump for a while now and these videos are helping to boost my enthusiasm for photography back up. THanks!
thank you for the concise and well articulated rundown of all that stuff i dont ever deal with!
Dat hat.
Why isn’t this stuff explained in the manual with the camera?
Thanks for explaining 😀