Photography 101 Part 1
by: Kelly Paal
Equipment: camera, meter, flash, tripod
This article is a simplified photography course directed at new photographers
out there who want to know where to start.
If you really want to learn photography
the first thing you need is a good affordable and reliable camera. It must,
and I repeat must, be able to shoot in fully manual and fully auto focus
modes. (This leaves out any digital cameras on the market right now, sorry.)
To really learn photography you must understand the equipment. You’ll need to learn how manipulating the shutter speed,
aperture, and focus will have a dramatic effect on your photos. Meters, if
you have a camera that can work in a fully manual mode it should have an internal
meter suitable for what you will be doing. Tripod, you’re going to need
one whether it’s portrait work or landscapes you’ll need one eventually.
Luckily you don’t have to spend a lot here. Just something lightweight
and durable. Flash, you can buy a separate camera mounted flash, which is great
if you can afford it. Consider what kind of photography that you will be doing
though. If you’re going to do mostly nature and landscape, you may only
need the fill flash that comes with most cameras today. If you plan on doing
portraiture alone you will want to consider a camera mounted flash that has
an adjustable angle.
Film, film speed to be exact. Slower speeds (25 to 400) are intended for portraiture
and landscape photography. Faster speeds (600 and above) are intended for actions
shots and photojournalism. So first you need to know what you going out to
photograph and make sure that you have the appropriate film for the job.
Now that you have the camera loaded with
film consider shutter speed. Do you want to blur motion, or freeze it? If
there is no motion at all what shutter speed do you need to expose the scene
with natural light. From 1/60th and down to the bulb setting will blur most
motion. For example if you want to blur the water in a waterfall, a setting
of 1/30th should work. (You’ll need
a tripod though.) 1/125th is a normal setting for most shots. On many cameras
the 125th setting is marked in a different color to make it obvious. If you
want to freeze action you’ll need to start with 1/500th and work up from
there. The faster the motion the faster the shutter speed needed to stop motion.
Many cameras go up to 1/2000th of a second. If you’re trying to use natural
light alone in a scene you will want to determine the aperture first and then
see what shutter speed you need to properly expose the scene for available
light. (Keep in mind sometimes there isn’t enough light.)
Aperture, these are the set of numbers
on your lens closest to the body of the camera. They can go from 1.8 to 22,
and they are referred to as F-stops. These numbers determine how much light
reaches the film inside of your camera. Most internal meters will blink on
the appropriate aperture for the shutter speed that you’ve set, or the speed you’ve set will blink if your
F-stop is correct for the speed. Both the F-stop and shutter speed can be changed
to expose the scene correctly. Consider that the faster the shutter speed the
more light will be needed to expose the scene correctly. This makes logical
sense if you think about it. If the shutter isn’t open as long, fast
shutter speed, then there is less light able to make it to the film and so
the scene must be brighter to expose correctly. To learn, bracket your shots.
Take the first shot at the aperture suggested by your meter, move one stop
up, take a photo, one down, take another photo.
Flash, I personally like shooting with
natural light whenever possible and at most I use a fill flash. But if you’re going to do portrait work then
most of the time you may be indoors and you will need a flash sometimes. For
the amateur the fill flash units that are on the top of most of today’s
cameras are wonderful for basic work. You will have to read your manual on
your particular flash unit to learn what it can and can’t do. This is
where the camera that is fully manual and fully auto is great for the amateur.
You can usually set it so that the camera will meter and set the flash output
accordingly and then you still can control the shutter speed and aperture.
This week’s assignment: Have several rolls of 400 speed film, find a
subject that you can work with preferably something that won’t move,
and shoot one roll of film. Shoot some of the roll in the morning, afternoon,
and evening. Bracket every shot, take notes on time of day and light conditions,
and what your settings (aperture) were for each frame, keep the film speed
the same for the entire roll. Have the film developed and examine the photos.
You should be able to see a difference in each frame. You’ll need to
repeat this procedure until you feel that you understand the relationship between
shutter speed and aperture, and every camera and meter has it’s own quirks
and differences, you’re camera will act differently than someone else’s.
This way you will learn you own particular camera as well. Once you have a
sense of how aperture works you won’t need to bracket every shot you
take, you may only need to do it in cases where you want to be extra safe on
exposing the subject correctly. |