Iris
Suspended / Banned
- Messages
- 1,505
- Name
- Jen
- Edit My Images
- Yes
Hi,
Can you settle a discussion for me? It's not a complicated one but I am just starting out so I'd like to know if i was thinking along the right lines or if I'm way out:
I was having a chat with a friend yesterday about his holiday, so I asked if he'd got any good shots and he said he'd set his aperture narrow so his shots were pretty grainy which hadn't been obvious on the camera screen at the time. Now, to me this would suggest he'd set his aperture too narrow and has left the ISO on Automatic and it's been too high. He says it's because he hand-held the camera. To me, if his aperture was set too narrow for the circumstances resulting in his shutter speed being too slow his shots would be blurry not grainy. Am I right or way off the mark?
He has the same camera as I do, the Canon 500D and when using Aperture mode I keep a check on shutter speed and ISO too, if the shutter speed drops below 1/60 and the ISO goes up above 400 or 800 (depending on conditions) then I change the f stop down gradually until I get a better combination (1/60 seems to be the slowest speed I can hand hold at and not get blurry shots)
Any feedback or opinions would be hugely appreciated, it's taking me a long time to get my head around the technical details
Can you settle a discussion for me? It's not a complicated one but I am just starting out so I'd like to know if i was thinking along the right lines or if I'm way out:
I was having a chat with a friend yesterday about his holiday, so I asked if he'd got any good shots and he said he'd set his aperture narrow so his shots were pretty grainy which hadn't been obvious on the camera screen at the time. Now, to me this would suggest he'd set his aperture too narrow and has left the ISO on Automatic and it's been too high. He says it's because he hand-held the camera. To me, if his aperture was set too narrow for the circumstances resulting in his shutter speed being too slow his shots would be blurry not grainy. Am I right or way off the mark?
He has the same camera as I do, the Canon 500D and when using Aperture mode I keep a check on shutter speed and ISO too, if the shutter speed drops below 1/60 and the ISO goes up above 400 or 800 (depending on conditions) then I change the f stop down gradually until I get a better combination (1/60 seems to be the slowest speed I can hand hold at and not get blurry shots)
Any feedback or opinions would be hugely appreciated, it's taking me a long time to get my head around the technical details