Merlin5
Suspended / Banned
- Messages
- 2,295
- Name
- Lee
- Edit My Images
- No
Hi guys. I watched a night time photography video where the guy was down under a bridge on the Thames embankment at night. He looked at his live view screen and said it's telling him it that at f11 and ISO 200 he needs a 60 second exposure. I was wondering how he knew, considering cameras only show shutter speeds down to 30 seconds. Then I read this article below which made me realise how he knew he needed 60 seconds,
It says "It's easy. First, establish a base exposure by using 30 second as your shutter speed and ISO as the exposure variable for preliminary calculations. In Manual exposure mode, select 30 seconds for the shutter speed, an ISO of 100, and the appropriate f-stop for depth of field considerations. Now, simply increase the ISO in full stops until the meter indicates that the scene is exposed correctly. Count the number of increased stops. If it was two stops, for example (ISO 100 to 400) then you just add those two stops to the shutter speed (30 seconds to 2 minutes) after resetting the ISO back to 100 and the exposure mode to Bulb. These are reciprocal exposures (30 seconds and 400 ISO equals 2 minutes and 100 ISO."
So is that the rule that I should always use, add 30 seconds for every extra 100 ISO I increase by until the exposure meter is in the centre, and would I add 10 seconds for every third of a stop?
Also, the photographer in the video I mentioned who did a 60 second exposure showed his final photo at ISO 200, f11 and 60 seconds. If he started at ISO 100 at f11 and moved it up to ISO 200 to get the correct exposure and calculate the exposure time he needs in bulb mode, should he not have reset the ISO back to 100 when he went into bulb mode? But the photo came out perfectly.
How To Calculate Long Exposures | Richard Bernabe
Here's a quick tutorial to calculate long exposures with your camera that are more than 30 seconds in length to capture streaking clouds and smooth, silky water.
www.richardbernabe.com
It says "It's easy. First, establish a base exposure by using 30 second as your shutter speed and ISO as the exposure variable for preliminary calculations. In Manual exposure mode, select 30 seconds for the shutter speed, an ISO of 100, and the appropriate f-stop for depth of field considerations. Now, simply increase the ISO in full stops until the meter indicates that the scene is exposed correctly. Count the number of increased stops. If it was two stops, for example (ISO 100 to 400) then you just add those two stops to the shutter speed (30 seconds to 2 minutes) after resetting the ISO back to 100 and the exposure mode to Bulb. These are reciprocal exposures (30 seconds and 400 ISO equals 2 minutes and 100 ISO."
So is that the rule that I should always use, add 30 seconds for every extra 100 ISO I increase by until the exposure meter is in the centre, and would I add 10 seconds for every third of a stop?
Also, the photographer in the video I mentioned who did a 60 second exposure showed his final photo at ISO 200, f11 and 60 seconds. If he started at ISO 100 at f11 and moved it up to ISO 200 to get the correct exposure and calculate the exposure time he needs in bulb mode, should he not have reset the ISO back to 100 when he went into bulb mode? But the photo came out perfectly.
Last edited: