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Arts & CraftsPhotography Tips & Techniques

How to Choose Your Shutter Speed

Instructions

  • Step 1: What shutter speed is Shutter speed denotes how long the shutter is held open to allow light to reach the film or, in a digital camera, the image sensor.
  • TIP: Along with the aperture—or the opening in the lens—shutter speed regulates how much light the camera will record.
  • Step 2: Determine shot Determine what you want to shoot and how the shutter speed will affect your images. Fast shutters will freeze the action, slow shutters leave motion blurs.
  • Step 3: Estimate speed of subject Estimate how fast your subject is moving. Also, higher shutter speeds are required when your subject is moving across the frame as opposed to coming directly at you.
  • Step 4: Decide on lens Decide on what lens you will be working with. This will determine the minimum shutter speed at which you can hold the camera and still get a sharp image.
  • TIP: Holding your camera at shutter speeds lower than one over the focal length of your lens may cause blurry images (from camera shake). Thus, for a 200 mm lens, the fastest feasible shutter speed would be roughly 1/250 of a second.
  • Step 5: Mount camera on tripod If shaking is a problem, mount your camera on a tripod or place it on a steady surface like a table.
  • Step 6: Set shutter speed Based on your analysis and artistic decision, set your shutter speed—then shoot the action.
  • TIP: Many digital cameras offer a Sports mode with a rapid succession shutter release. Try this setting to get a sequence of stop-motion images.
  • Step 7: Test shutter speeds Test different shutter speeds until you get the effect you want. You can even have a friend stand in for experiments.
  • FACT: The first photographer to game fame through stop-motion photography was Eadweard Muybridge, who in the 1870s proved there was a point when a trotting horse had all four legs off the ground.

You Will Need

  • A digital SLR
  • or single-lens reflex
  • camera
  • Tripod

Lessons in this Guide

How to Photobomb

How to Avoid Red Eye in Photos

How to Take Photos of Food

How to Take Photos of Christmas Lights

How to Achieve Artistic Lens Flare

How to Choose the Right Lens for Your DSLR Camera

How to Take Great Winter Pictures

How to Take Great Spring Break Photos

How to Spot a Photo That’s Been Retouched

How to Take Great Pictures of Cats

How to Photograph Natural Phenomena Phenomenally

How to Get Pictures from Video

How to Take Self-Portraits

How to Make a Bokeh Lens

How to Photograph Landscapes

How to Take Cute Baby Pictures

How to Make an Aerial Photography Rig with a Disposable Camera

How to Take a Family Portrait

How to Clean a Camera Lens

How to Light a Fashion Shot

How To Take a Group Portrait

How to Make a Pinhole Camera

How to Light a Portrait

How to Take a Child’s Portrait

How to Take Great Photographs

How to Take a Woman’s Portrait

How to Take a Portrait

How to Take Pictures of Wild Animals

How to Make a Tripod with a Piece Of String, a Beanbag, or Your Body

How to Take a Man’s Portrait

How to Take a Fashion Portrait

How to Make a Mini Tripod for Your Camera

How to Take a Nude Portrait

How to Take Pictures in Bright Sunlight

How to Choose Your Virtual Film Speed

How to Choose Your Shutter Speed

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