Booo.. yah! Welcome to my little blog. My last tweet was :
""

follow me on Twitter or add me on Facebook

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Advanced Settings on DSLR camera


It is always a great fun to start taking advantage of the fully automatic functions that can be found in almost every DSLR camera
. Taking pictures on automatic can produces amazing results and for someone that might not have even used this type of camera before they will find it purely amazing. But that is just the beginning.

Once you start to discover and learn what else your great little camera can do it opens up another whole new wonderful world... There are many advanced settings and features on DSLR digital camera, and most of them are the same across the board (except there are different terminology used in different models).
A majority of cameras tend to have a mode dial which usually has some little images such as a Flower for close-up photography, a Face for portraits, Mountains for landscapes and wide angle, a Sportsperson for those sporting events (this generally puts the camera into a continual picture taking mode), a Lunar effect for night time use all of which can be pretty self explanatory.

The rest of the details on this mode dial are normally the letters P, A, S, M, and AUTO, which require a little more investigation.
  • P is used for still maintaining some of the automatic features such as the focusing, but allows you to set other parameters of the camera yourself that are held in the memory until you change them.
  • A is used for controlling aperture priority which blurs foreground and background in close pictures and gives a better depth of field for distance and landscape shots.
  • S is used for photographing moving objects of various expressions working with shutter speed priority.
  • M is used for mainly manual exposure where you would adjust both the speed and aperture settings of your camera.
  • AUTO is pretty much self explanatory and one setting that most people tend to use first and foremost when initially obtaining a DSLR digital camera.
Some of the above may sound fairly complicated, but the more that you use your camera the more you will come to understand and want to have control over these settings in certain situations. With all of the above modes is additional information for applying them correctly with each camera. To ensure that the correct settings are applied the user manual should always be referred to.

You might take a look at digital photography guides because it might help you to understand many of these rather complicated terminology.

Source : http://www.articlesbase.com/digital-photography-articles/advanced-settings-on-dslr-camera-1473141.html

0 comments:

Post a Comment

 
Copyright 2009 #man-called-zonkee. Powered by Blogger Blogger Templates create by Deluxe Templates. WP by Masterplan