VisionAir
lvl.3
Flight distance : 954665 ft
Australia
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Thanks for your questions, When shooting night shots or anything low light your best setting for iso is the lowest that your lens can go, when shooting stills with a flash at night /lowlight I would maybe use 200 to 400 iso, but in natural low I always use the lowest iso to minimise the grain effect. The effect that iso has on the cameras sensor is the higher the number the more sensitive the sensor is to light but the trade off is as the number increases so doses the grain in your picture. With regards to your question about the shutter/fps "rule", remember this, there is nowhere else in the world of rules where it is ok to break the rules....so long as you understand why the rule exists, the shutter/fps rule is used when you want a nice smooth look to your video some people call it the filmic look however for example if you want a crisper look you would increase your fps i.e.: more frames per second with the same shutter speed will produce crisper individual frames so your image will be crisper but the trade off there at some point is if you go to high with your frame rate your image will have a jitterery look to it. So remember in low natural light for less grain in your image use iso 100 and if you want smoother look rather than a crisper look use the Shutter/Fps "rule" and if you get nothing else out of this IT IS OK TO BREAK THE PHOTOGRAPHIC RULES IN FACT SHOULD BE ENCOURAGED SO LONG AS YOU UNDERSTAND THE RULE THAT YOU ARE ABOUT TO BREAK. I hope this helps you in you quest for that perfect moment, when you see it in your view finder you will know and be INSPIRED. Thanks again for your questions. |
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