As a beginner in the field, I have thoroughly enjoyed your videos and your explanation of things are very easy to remember and put to practice. I really hope you continue with the basics series. I think alot of us are looking forward to them. It would be nice to see the whole range of series as you had mentioned in your first basic video. Again thanks for helping us out
it helps me to remember why smaller aperture numbers mean more light: if you think of a pie, 2 pieces mean each serving is a lot larger than if there are 22 pieces of pie.
I think I was to caught up in compensating for the one moving in front of the camera, that I forgot to account for my own movement. The shutter speed tip you gave should definitely be the fix for my blurry photos. Going to test this right away.
I am new to digital slrs. I am use to a cannon a1. My question is this. W h en you determine your f stop does the camera set it for you or donyou have to manually set it. Thanks tom
okay, so how does film speed relate to iso? like, if film is labeled 400. if 400 is the best shutter speed for this film, why don't you just always keep shutter speed at 400? and then 800 means more sensitivity- are the numbers on film like- max speed for the least noise?I don't understand why it's specified if you can just change all the settings around
Great question! Film speed and ISO are the exact same thing. ISO 100 on a digital camera is almost the same sensitivity as ISO 100 film. Just be careful, ISO 400 doesn't mean that 1/400th of a second is the best shutter speed for that ISO. The two are correlated, but they don't relate like that.
Here's a little tip a teacher taugh me re Aperture/Depth of Field that I easily remember. F2 for example would mean only 2 people are in focus. F32 would mean, roughly, 32 people are in focus. Works like a charm.
The triangle is light, time and diaphragm. Iso dictates what exposure is necessary to obtain a good result. Two isos can have same exposure. Exposure is the quantity of light falling on the sensor whatever it's sensitivity.
Films people knew using high Iso films lowered exposure VS low sensitivity. Today our sensors have only one native sensitivity so higher iso choice means underexposition.
This is an unbelievably useful resource. More or less everything I wanted to know right here in one place. I've just borrowed a relatives camera and am aiming to get a FUJIFILM X-E2 or something shortly. I've been mucking around with settings trying to figure things out by trial and error and though I've had some luck with ISO I was a bit confused about shutter speed, and aperture was a mystery until now! Thank you! Great video!
You're an amazing Teacher, but you've probably heard that many times before. Question, are related to Dave Morrow by chance? Cheer's from Vancouver, British Columbia Canada.
Hey Forest, thanks for the great video! Really helpful. Did you ever get to make number two in the series? If so, can you point me to it, I searched for the same name (with 2 at the end) on your video page but it couldn't find it. Thank you :0)
I find with my camera (Nikon D5300) that in many situations I can’t easily read the exposure data in the viewfinder due to the light levels from the subject. Hence I still have to look at the screen, which is sometimes very inconvenient.
Thank you for your very thorough explanation. I've watched so many and as a person with ADHD it's just too much for me. Your explanation, stating keywords that I will easily remember per controls will help me remember. Aperture - may blur or crisp background, shutter - is more about my own movement or subjects', and ISO will give noise when higher. Though there's more to this but I wrote down all you said so I will remember. Thank you very much
I think I just fell in love with you. Seriously, dude. Please make videos about world peace and economics and how to get babies to stop crying on planes. I learned more from this one video than in the previous 40 years of other books, videos, in-person classes, etc.
I just got my Canon 600D and been watching different tutorials on photography. I am glad to have watched your video. You are the best teacher I ever have. You made the three exposure elements clear. I hope as I get through to your videos, I will be able to understand my camera's manual mode. Thanks. 😊 👏
This is my favorite go to channel to learn my new passion. Thankyou for the time spent making these for us to have a free way to increase our skill levels. This is a patreon i don't mind donating too🤗
Very helpful and informative stuff. I'm a long-time hobbyist, who sometimes hits upon a decent shot by accident, and I've decided that it's finally time to try to actually learn a bit about what I'm doing. Your channel was recommended to me by a friend who is an excellent photographer, and this was time well spent. I'm looking forward to checking out some of your other offerings.
i have watched so many tutorials and my mom is a photographer as well. i’ve tried to learn the difference for so long and i honestly felt so unintelligent, i could not understand for the life of me. i finally get it now, thank you seriously.
A very interesting and informative tutorial series you have provided. I would have preferred, you had brought out classic film cameras from yesteryear, in the days where and when the photographer had to determine all parameters, ahead of time, to get the best photo. I'm old school in this regard, but I do have friends and associates who own and use the latest flagship digital cameras who rely too heavily on exposure and focusing automation. It is way too easy for them to bracket challenging exposure conditions over multiple frames, covering all the bases. I understand how for sport and journalistic photography, where the subject is on the move and the lighting variability, as it does, how these automations could facilitate image capture greatly. But for more static and composed photography, large and medium format cameras -- that require the photographer to understand these basics -- may be a better place to start...at the beginning