Shutter speed and aperture – Nikon E2 - E2S User Manual

Page 77

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Shutter speed and aperture

Light reaching the CCD image device is controlled by shutter

speed and aperture. The proper combination results in a
correct exposure. You can use shutter speed to freeze the
action by using a high shutter speed, or create a motion effect

by choosing a slower shutter speed. You can control depth of

field by varying the aperture. Smaller apertures make the

background and foreground sharper while larger apertures

tend to blur the background.

Taken with high shutter speed Taken with slow shutter speed

The higher the shutter speed the more effectively you can stop the action, and
the slower the shutter speed the more blurry the action becomes.

Taken with narrow aperture

Taken with wide aperture

Depth of field is the zone of sharpness in front of, behind and around the

subject on which the lens is focused, and it is greatly affected by aperture.

The smaller the aperture, the more distinct the background and foreground, and

the larger the aperture the sharper the main subject appears against a blurred

background.

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