I am wordering how to take a good picture on the rainy days.
How to choose good length for this issue?
Thank you for any help in advance!
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How To Take A Good Picture In The Rainydays?
Started by vietnamcar, Nov 13 2010 10:23 AM
1 reply to this topic
#2
Posted 15 January 2012 - 10:42 PM
It depends what you want to photograph and how, plus whether you are in the rain or under cover etc... and what camera you have.
If you have a little point and shoot camera (EG one of the standard "in your pocket" cameras then you only really need to worry about it getting wet, in which case im fairly sure there are commercial covers out there to stop it getting wet, or simply have an umbrella!
If you have a DSLR then you can also manually choose the settings, and so we begin! If it is raining then it is dark, at least a camera would consider it dark, in which case you need to raise the ISO lower the shutter speed, don't go above ISO 4-600 though or you will get grainy images. With the shutter speed the usual rule is to stick to a shutter speed above your lens length. So if your lens is 70mm long you want to use a shutter speed above 1/70 and so on...
It all really depends what kit you have and what you want to photograph!
If you have a little point and shoot camera (EG one of the standard "in your pocket" cameras then you only really need to worry about it getting wet, in which case im fairly sure there are commercial covers out there to stop it getting wet, or simply have an umbrella!
If you have a DSLR then you can also manually choose the settings, and so we begin! If it is raining then it is dark, at least a camera would consider it dark, in which case you need to raise the ISO lower the shutter speed, don't go above ISO 4-600 though or you will get grainy images. With the shutter speed the usual rule is to stick to a shutter speed above your lens length. So if your lens is 70mm long you want to use a shutter speed above 1/70 and so on...
It all really depends what kit you have and what you want to photograph!
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