How Does Shutter Speed Works?
We looked at aperture last article, in this one we’re going to look at how shutter speed affects your image.
Think of the shutter as a curtain that opens and closes to let
light hit your camera’s sensor. Shutter speed is quite simply how fast
that curtain opens
and closes, thereby controlling how much light is let into the camera. It can
create dramatic effects by blurring motion and freezing it, and is also
important in gaining correct exposure. The first step in using shutter speed to
shape your images is to understand how it works.
How Shutter Speed Affects Your
Images
Shutter speed means
the length of time your camera shutter is open to let light in to your camera sensor.
It’s measured in fractions of seconds right up to minutes. A fast shutter speed
can freeze motion – think of birds in flight, or athletes caught in a moment of
action – and a slow one will give a motion blur to anything moving. Think of
those images of waterfalls where the water is white and silky-smooth, or an
image shot from a moving vehicle.
If you are shooting at night or in low light, you’ll need to
use a slow shutter speed – the shutter will stay open longer to allow as much
light as possible in to the sensor, so you don’t end up with an underexposed
photograph.
You’ll probably need to use a tripod at shutter speeds of less
than 1/60th of a second or your image will become blurred
through camera shake– in my case, I know from experience that I cannot
hand-hold my camera at anything less than 1/100th second
because it’s simply impossible to keep it perfectly still for any longer than
that. With practice, you will come to know what your own limit for hand-holding
your camera is.
If you are shooting on a bright, sunny day, you’ll need to use a
high shutter speed so as not to over-expose your image. The shutter will open
and close extremely quickly to limit the amount of light hitting the sensor.
A fast shutter speed is generally anything above 1/250th of
a second, and should freeze movement, and a slow shutter speed is generally
anything under 1/30th of a second, and will blur anything
moving even slightly.
Freezing Motion With a Fast Shutter
Speed
In this image below, the photographer has used a fast shutter speed to freeze motion.
You can see all the dust flying up into the air from the bike
wheels, frozen in the fraction of a second that the shutter was open for.
This can be very effective for wildlife shots, or catching
crucial sporting moments, as it gives a real sense of drama and action to the
image.
Catching Motion Blur With a Slow
Shutter Speed
In the long-exposure image below, however, all you can see are
the trails of light the vehicles have left. This is because they passed through
the image while the shutter was still open, hence this is a slow shutter speed.
You can also see that a bus passed through the image, as the route number 87 is
clearly visible within the light trails. The telephone box and the buildings
are not blurred because they are not moving, whereas the traffic is.
The Relationship Between Shutter
Speed and Aperture
Remember last article when I said aperture, shutter speed and ISO were the holy
trinity of photography?
If you still have your camera on program or automatic mode,
that’s fine, but you’ll get so much more control by learning how to take it
fully manual. The aim of these three articles is to get you understanding
exactly how to make aperture, shutter speed, and ISO work together effectively.
Once you know how to do that, you will gain the confidence to put your camera
in manual mode.
You learned how aperture can affect your image by controlling
the amount of light coming in to the camera – now we’re adding shutter speed to
the mix. Next article we’ll build on this by adding ISO, so that you’re
gradually understanding how all three work together, but for now we’ll
concentrate on aperture and shutter speed.
As you will have gathered by now, shutter speed also controls
how much light hits your camera sensor, just like aperture. There is a direct
relationship between the f-stop you choose and the shutter speed you’ll need to
gain correct exposure.
Do you recall how if you put your camera on f/1.2, you’re
actually letting in far more light than you would at f/22? We’ve learned from
this article that a fast shutter speed lets in less light, and a slow shutter
speed lets in more light.
So, if you put your camera on f/1.2, would you choose a fast
shutter speed or slow shutter speed to expose your image correctly? It depends
on the light conditions you’re in, but
generally the larger the aperture (smaller f-number) the faster the shutter
speed needs to be.
For example – on a bright, sunny day at f/1.2 you’d choose a
very fast shutter speed in order to not completely blow your image out and be
left with just a bright, white rectangle. Why? Because at f/1.2, your camera’s
aperture is as wide open as it can go, thus is letting in lots of bright,
sunshiny light to the sensor already. If you choose a slow shutter speed of,
say, 1/30th second, you’re flooding the sensor with even more light
from the shutter! This overload of light simply burns away your image, leaving
your image horribly overexposed with no details left.
The opposite is true also. If you chose to shoot at f/22, your
camera’s aperture is very small, only letting a tiny amount of light through to
the sensor. If you choose a fast shutter speed of 1/500th second,
the shutter is only open for that fraction of time, and not enough light gets
to your sensor, resulting in a pitch-black image that is underexposed, and
again has no details left in it.
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