Digital Photography from 20,000 Feet
by Wesley Fink on September 25, 2006 12:05 AM EST- Posted in
- Digital Camera
Shutter Speed: Stopping Motion and Controlling Light
Shutter speed is technically how long the the shutter remains open in a digital SLR or any camera. This is only theoretically the case in SLRs since a focal plane shutter uses a moving slit to expose, but it is close enough for our discussion about photo basics. There is an old rule that any photographer, even an amateur who doesn't care about understanding the process, needs to commit to memory. We will make it bold.
The fastest shutter speed you can hand hold is 1 over the focal length of the lens.
What this means is the fastest blur free picture you can shoot is at a shutter speed of one over the effective focal length of the lens. This means our 18-55mm lens, which acts like a 28-85mm lens can produce sharp pictures at 1/30 second or faster at the wide-angle end and 1/125 second and faster at the telephoto end. Some people are really good at holding a camera steady and can do better than this, but this is always a good rule of thumb.
The shutter speeds for a digital SLR are much wider than you will find on a point-and-shoot digital. Where the point-and-shoot might do 2 or 3 speeds up to 1/600s, the digital SLR offers a very wide range of shutter speeds. Most SLRs today perform over a range of about 30 seconds to 1/4000 second, and the shutter speed range is similar to ISO in that the larger the number the more light is passed. The scale is also approximately linear:
1 - 1/2 - 1/4 - 1/8 - 1/15 - 1/30 - 1/60 - 1/125 - 1/250 - 1/500 - 1/1000 - 1/2000 - 1/4000
Each value going faster passes half the light of the lower value. So 1/15s passes twice the light of 1/30s. This brings us back to the other part of why you get blurry pictures with your kit zoom lens indoors. Since the kit zoom passes 1/4 to 1/12 the light of a normal f1.7 lens, it must shoot at slower speeds (let in more light) for proper exposure. When you fall below 1/60 to 1/30s those properly exposed images will be blurry with your kit zoom.
Shutter speed is technically how long the the shutter remains open in a digital SLR or any camera. This is only theoretically the case in SLRs since a focal plane shutter uses a moving slit to expose, but it is close enough for our discussion about photo basics. There is an old rule that any photographer, even an amateur who doesn't care about understanding the process, needs to commit to memory. We will make it bold.
The fastest shutter speed you can hand hold is 1 over the focal length of the lens.
What this means is the fastest blur free picture you can shoot is at a shutter speed of one over the effective focal length of the lens. This means our 18-55mm lens, which acts like a 28-85mm lens can produce sharp pictures at 1/30 second or faster at the wide-angle end and 1/125 second and faster at the telephoto end. Some people are really good at holding a camera steady and can do better than this, but this is always a good rule of thumb.
The shutter speeds for a digital SLR are much wider than you will find on a point-and-shoot digital. Where the point-and-shoot might do 2 or 3 speeds up to 1/600s, the digital SLR offers a very wide range of shutter speeds. Most SLRs today perform over a range of about 30 seconds to 1/4000 second, and the shutter speed range is similar to ISO in that the larger the number the more light is passed. The scale is also approximately linear:
1 - 1/2 - 1/4 - 1/8 - 1/15 - 1/30 - 1/60 - 1/125 - 1/250 - 1/500 - 1/1000 - 1/2000 - 1/4000
Each value going faster passes half the light of the lower value. So 1/15s passes twice the light of 1/30s. This brings us back to the other part of why you get blurry pictures with your kit zoom lens indoors. Since the kit zoom passes 1/4 to 1/12 the light of a normal f1.7 lens, it must shoot at slower speeds (let in more light) for proper exposure. When you fall below 1/60 to 1/30s those properly exposed images will be blurry with your kit zoom.
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wheel - Tuesday, September 26, 2006 - link
Thanks for your reply.Regarding the Canon 50mm 1.8, I think most people would agree that the 1.4 is better since it has full time manual focus and also a silent USM motor, plus 8 aperture blades instead of 5 for nicer, smoother looking bokeh (out of focus areas in an image). Of course when you consider the cost differential most people choose the f1.8 and for many it is the smarter choice! However I still believe your sentence in the article suggesting that it happens to be the sharpest lens in the lineup a little misleading. Not a big deal I guess.
If I can make some comments on the following paragraph:
There are plenty of Digital Camera Review sites out on the web, so you may ask why AnandTech is re-launching a Digital Photography section. It appears that current sites are rarely on target with what computer enthusiasts want to know about digital cameras. Some sites make the assumption that the reader knows a lot more about photography than our average reader, which often leads to much of the review being gibberish to a non-photographer. Other sites dwell on tests of things like "start-up times" that were important in early digital, but have become all but meaningless in today's digital SLR market. Still other sites, which are very well-grounded in traditional photography show an obvious lack of knowledge about computers and computer tools that make digital photography so flexible today. It is our sincere belief that we can do it in a better way for our readers and computer enthusiasts everywhere, but please help us as we try to reinvent this wheel. Some of our readers may not like AT delving into Digital Camera Reviews, and to them we say you just can't ignore digital photography any more. Today's digital imaging is nothing more than an optic stuck on a computer, and there is very little left of the mechanical gems that once ruled the world of photography.
A few points:
"Some sites make the assumption that the reader knows a lot more about photography than our average reader, which often leads to much of the review being gibberish to a non-photographer."
So a 'non-photographer' will find a technical review on the big digital camera sites gibberish? I don't think that is a problem, because such reviews aren't really aimed at non-photographers. I would guess that non-computer users are going to find articles on Anandtech about ram timings difficult to understand too!
Other sites dwell on tests of things like "start-up times" that were important in early digital, but have become all but meaningless in today's digital SLR market.
See my comments re: sports / action photography in my previous post. Start up times, shot to shot times and file flush times are quite important to me! Other sites have (very comprehensive) standardised tests that include these timings. I wouldn't say they dwell on the subject though, unless a particular camera is unusually bad at it. If it is not something that is relevant then a reader can easily skip it.
Still other sites, which are very well-grounded in traditional photography show an obvious lack of knowledge about computers and computer tools that make digital photography so flexible today.
In my years of reading the major photo review websites, I haven't encountered this. Without asking you to be specific, can you mention general examples of what you mean?
Cheers,
Ian
tagej - Tuesday, September 26, 2006 - link
The reality is that most computer geeks (myself included) are not photography experts, but are overall tech-savy and interested in things like digital SLR cameras.Sure, I can go to sites like dpreview and the like, and they do an excellent job of reviewing cameras from a pro or prosumer perspective. I could sit and read a bunch of stuff on those sites and educate myself to the point of becoming very knowledgable about cameras... Most of us don't want to do that, or we would have already done so. Instead, AT hit it right on the head with this article, it's a look at digital photograhpy for the tech savy who are not photography experts.
arswihart - Tuesday, September 26, 2006 - link
I totally agree with "wheel." If you feel the need to review cameras, go ahead, but thats not what I come to Anandtech for.aeternitas - Monday, September 25, 2006 - link
" The artistic types distrust turning their vision into cheap Adobe Photoshop tricks, and the tech-savvy are so enamored of technology and editing that they often don't have a clue about what makes a good photograph and what lens to use in a given situation. "I stopped reading there. If you want respectable people to respect you, its a good idea not to be a fucking jackass and insult the readers in the second paragraph. Get some common sence.
Resh - Tuesday, September 26, 2006 - link
Have to side with Wes on this one. Nothing in his words are offensive. He is simply stating the view point of two extremes of the population who both hold very valid positions.Wesley Fink - Monday, September 25, 2006 - link
These are comments from discussions I have had on Forums and in emails with readers. They were not meant to offend, but to point out the fact that the art and technical don't always mix well. This is particularly true when the market, and not the people affected, is forcing changes in the way people work.ksherman - Monday, September 25, 2006 - link
since we have had a camera review on AT! Kudos!To those that say no, I also like to read reviews from multiple sources. AT- dont try to be dpreview, make your reviews a little less technical, easier to understand. Not to fault them, but you need to have some pretty serious photography knolwedge to get their reviews. I would welcome an easier to understand set of reviews. (I do still enjoy reading about my level :-))
On another note, on the last page, you called canons new camera the Rebel XT1, its actually the XTi.
Also, take a gander at the Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ50, its a sort of pre-digital SLR camera. It basically is a digital SLR, but with an attached lense. Its looking to be my next camera purchase since I am too poor to afford the "real" DSLRs.
saiku - Monday, September 25, 2006 - link
I am a hobbyist photographer (Canon 350D) who likes to do macros/scenery when I can. What I'd love to see are guides for people who want to get into DSLRs and don't know which camera system to buy into. For example, if a person is interested in macros, should he buy into a Nikon system? What about the guy who wants to shoot lots of indoor shots of his baby? Lens choices are very tough for newbies to make and a hefty dose of attention to what lens to pick would be great.PokerGuy - Monday, September 25, 2006 - link
Wes, thanks for the great article. I'm a grizzled vet when it comes to PC tech, but when it comes to photography I'm pretty much a noob. I appreciate the article and look forward to reviews, especially since I'm about to purchase my first digital SLR camera.One dumb question: are lenses for SLR cameras "standard" in terms of connecting to the camera body? ie, can I take a Canon EOS Rebel 2000 SLR lens and hook it up to some other digital SLR camera?
Resh - Monday, September 25, 2006 - link
Also, Canon EF-S lenses only fit certain cameras (Digital Rebels, 20D, 30D), but EF lenses work on all current Canon bodies, digital or film.Third party manufacturers like Tamron and Sigma will make lenses for both Canon and Nikon.