simonmoran
Suspended / Banned
- Messages
- 401
- Edit My Images
- No
So I was down at the quayside today testing my new 600d, and I wanted to use a long exposure to get the glass like water effect.
The water wasn't moving particularly fast but I couldn't dial in any combination of aperture, iso and shutter speed that would result in anything other than a massively over exposed picture.
I tried setting the aperture to its highest f jumper and even at iso 100 and a shutter speed of 1 second, the whole picture was massively overblown. Now it was a reasonably bright day (if heavily overcast) and the composition was split roughly 50/50 water and sky.
Given the above, is it possible to get the desired effect or would I need a faster moving subject (allowing a slower shutter speed and thus not over exposing the image). Or do I need a composition that doesn't contain two extremes of exposures.
The water wasn't moving particularly fast but I couldn't dial in any combination of aperture, iso and shutter speed that would result in anything other than a massively over exposed picture.
I tried setting the aperture to its highest f jumper and even at iso 100 and a shutter speed of 1 second, the whole picture was massively overblown. Now it was a reasonably bright day (if heavily overcast) and the composition was split roughly 50/50 water and sky.
Given the above, is it possible to get the desired effect or would I need a faster moving subject (allowing a slower shutter speed and thus not over exposing the image). Or do I need a composition that doesn't contain two extremes of exposures.