Nikon fe User Manual

Page 28

Attention! The text in this document has been recognized automatically. To view the original document, you can use the "Original mode".

Advertising
background image

Expo'ilire Con f'ol

The amount of light reaching the film plane is deter­

mined by a combination of the lens aperture and the
shutter speed. Since the two are interrelated, different
combinations will give the same exposure. A 1-step
change in the shutter speed, or a 1-stop change in the

aperture setting, will either halve or double the expo­
sure. For example, a shutter speed of 1/125 second
allows twice as much light to strike the film as a setting
of 1/250 second, and only half as much light as a speed
of 1/60 second; with an aperture setting of f/11, twice as
much light enters the lens at f/8, and half as much at
f/16. With this in mind, it’s easy to see that if a correct
exposure for a scene is 1 /1 25 at f/11, then 1/60 at f/16
or 1 /250 at f/8 will give you exactly the same exposure.

The best combination will depend on the desired results.

Use fast shutter speeds to freeze motion, or slow speeds

to produce deliberate and creative blur. Small apertures

give greater depth of field, while large apertures restrict

sharp focus to the main subject. The creative selection of
both speeds and apertures will greatly enhance your
photography.

Distributed by WWW.LENSINC.NET

27

Advertising