Friday, December 13, 2013

Basics of Photography - Part II

Hello friends, hope you might have enjoyed the Part I of this basics. It is good to write down some more basics in this post. I would be happy to add more stuffs based on your questions as well. So, please share your comments and raise your questions in comments section. Here, i am going to cover the secondary stuffs one need to understand if he/she is looking for technical portion of photography.

We are going to cover items such as Focal Length, Image Stabilization, Aperture, Shutter Speed, Modes, ISO, Auto Focus, Manual Focus, Focus Points, Prime and Zoom Lenses, Fast Lens, Focal Length Range and its application etc.


Focal Length

Angle of view and Focal Length goes together in photography. Wide Angle to Ultra Zoom and similarly 10mm to 1000mm are the examples for Angle of View and Focal Length respectively.

Before taking any photo, the photographer should know what kind of picture he is going to take and accordingly he need a lens with that focal length usually specified in mm. 


Camera's Crop Factor

Generally any DSLR camera can be classified into Full-Frame or APS-C Format or Micro-Four Thirds etc.. These are the terminologies used in photography to refer the Image Sensor Size built into the Camera Body.. Old days, they always use 35mm films such as Kodak, Fujinon etc with different sensitivity for different application. On the invent of digital SLR, the images will be captured through the sensor of varied sizes... Full-Frame is (35 mm), APS-C (1.6 times of 35 mm), Micro-Four Thirds (2 times of 35 mm) and Medium Format (0.5 times of 35 mm).. 

What does that mean? It increases the effective focal length directly based on what Camera Body we are using.. Using a 35mm lens on APS-C sized camera (Canon T2i, Nikon D7100 etc) will increase the effective focal length of the lens to 35 * 1.5  ~ 52.5mm roughly. So, that introduces the picture taken with a little more Zoom Range. We may be thinking, we are taking a picture on 35mm lens, in fact, it is equivalent to taking a picture with 53mm lens on Full Frame Camera (Canon 5dMkIII etc).
For more details about the crop factor, please check the link crop size


Aperture

Aperture can roughly termed as a hole inside the lens, not in the camera that lets the light to reach the camera sensor.. Good news is, by controlling aperture we can control letting the light to reach the sensor. If the aperture hole is bigger in diameter, more light falls into sensor and vice versa. Usually maximum aperture is specified as F1.4 F2.8 (aka Fast Lenses) and minimum aperture is specified as F 22. Aperture size also has ranges such as F2.8, F3.2, F4, F5.6, F6.3, F8, F16, F22 with F2.8/3.2 as maximum to F16/F22 as minimum. They call each calibrated number as one f-stop... Turning aperture dial from F2.8 to F5.6 or F3.2 to F6.3 is '1 F-Stop'.. This means, the lighting will be reduced by 1 F-Stop... This aperture is one way of controlling the light for your photography.


Shutter Speed

Shutter is a small mechanism in camera body which opens and closes when we click on the Shutter button on camera. This is another way of letting the light into the sensor (digital) or film (old cameras). Having said that, by controlling the shutter speed, we can control the amount of light falls on the sensor. Faster (1/2000) the shutter speed is lower the light intake will be. Slower (1/20, 1s etc) the shutter speed is, maximum light intake will be.

An important point to remember when adjusting the shutter speed is, when you go below 1/100, chances are that, there will be a blur in your picture if you hand-held the camera.. If mounted on a Tripod, even 1s will never make a blur.. 

So on a sunny day, there is no need to reduce the shutter speed. You can set it to 1/500 and above. On the contrary, on low-light conditions, it is not advisable to go beyond 1/100 depends on available light.


Mode

Camera Mode dial in each camera will be different. But most of the DSLRs will have preset modes (auto, action, portrait, macro), semi creative mode (Aperture Priority, Shutter Priority) and full creative (manual). Please refer your camera manual for getting a good understanding of this dial and modes.Depends on how you want to capture the moments, you can set the dial appropriately.


ISO

ISO is the sensitivity of the image sensor which is made of flip flops and transistors. Usually ISO ranges from 100 - 3200. In some camera, it will go upto 12600.. Usually lower the ISO, better the picture will be.. Grains on the picture will be low.. That said, one is good to go upto 800 depends on the lighting.. On worst lighting conditions, one can go to 1600 beyond which most of the camera introduces too much grains or noise in the picture that spoils it.


Auto Focus/Manual Focus

Usually there will be a jack on camera body to toggle AF/MF according to photographer's needs. Auto Focus works when focus points meeting the closest subject with a good contrast . Also, the DSLR lens such as EFS series on canon and equivalent in other brands will have a AF/MF switch on the lens as well. Manual focus let the users to rotate the focus ring on the lens and the focus assist point will do beep sound on meeting the subject.


Focus Points/Focus Assist

When we look through view finder or by pressing focus point button (check your camera manual to find this), we can see some points (9 points or 21 points based on different camera). These are focus assisting points which helps the photographer to focus the subject at specific part of the frame. Camera lets us to choose either all or specific point through some keys.


Image Stabilization (IS/OS)

This is a key concept that will help to take sharp pictures hand-held. This always comes as lens settings. There will be a counter shaking mechanism in the lens that counter acts when there is a shake by the photographer. This mechanism will also be referred as Optical Stabilization OS etc. IS when clubbed up with the silent focusing motor (USM or HSM or VSD in different brands). 


Prime and Zoom Lens

Prime Lens are the lenses that are renowned for taking sharp pictures and always have only a specific focal length in mm. Lens such as 35 mm, 50mm, 85 mm, 100 mm are prime lens. Zoom lens are with focal length ranges such as 18-55mm, 55-250mm, 70-200 mm, 70-300 mm etc.When composing with prime lens, usually the photographer needs to move back and forth to get right composition. With zoom lens, it is easy to compose the pictures by rotating the zoom ring to suit appropriate focal length. Zoom lens are further classified into standard zoom (24-70mm), telephoto (70-200mm), ultra zoom (200 - 1000 mm).


Fast Lens

Fast lens are the lens with maximum aperture from f1.0 - f2.8. They are very good for low-light event photography or indoor sports photography. 


Basics of Photography - Part I

Welcome to my blog folks!! For anyone who is new to DSLR Photography, it's been essential to understand the basics of photography. I would like to share some of my experiences on DSLR photography through this blog, specifically on the basics here.

At the outset, Photography is an art and science put together, meaning, it involves both the right and left brain of the person. In simple terms, both creative (C) and technical (T) side. 

Photography is all about the Exposure, Composition and Lighting. Having said that, doesn't mean one need to understand only those. But these are the 3 primary factors which decide how good your photograph looks. Other stuffs such as a knowledge of your Camera Body and the lens (its functions and effective aperture), focal lengths, metering, depth-of-field, "bokeh" etc will help one to capture great photographs. 


"If we do not understand the gears we use, great photographs will be an accident. If we understand it better way, it will be an art."



Lighting (T)
As you all know, this is the basis for any photograph to look better or worst.. It decides whether the photograph is under-exposed or over-exposed.. In a moment, we will define what is exposure as well.. There are some tools in the camera display (Histogram) which guides the photographer to understand whether the photo captured is under/over exposed. Lighting is the technical part of photography.

Lighting can be categorized into available lighting or infused lighting (usually through built-in flash, external flash, off-camera flash, reflectors etc). The infused lighting is more of a creative approach whereas the available lighting gives you more of a natural look. Usually studio settings or advanced photographers will use infused lighting as how they want to portray the subjects.

 

Exposure (T)

This is a general term which refers to how well you are exposing your camera's film/sensor to the lighting and the object.  Usually the exposure can be controlled through Shutter Speed, Aperture, ISO (in Digital Cameras), Film Sensitiveness (Cameras prior to digital era). The units for lighting in photography is usually termed in 'f-stops', where 'f' is letter used to denote the aperture. Usually the lens aperture will be calibrated or printed with the maximum (f1.4) and minimum (f22) f-stops. Exposure is the technical part of photography.

Following are the example images that shows the difference between 3 exposures... Under-exposed, Over-exposed and correctly exposed. 






In terms of gears, the example can be sited as Canon 18 - 55 mm f 3.5 - 5.6. Here f3.5 is the maximum aperture for this lens (photos will be exposed to more lighting due to bigger aperture hole) and f5.6 is the minimum aperture (photos will be exposed to relatively less lighting due to comparatively smaller aperture hole)


For more details about the exposure, please visit the link "Exposure Basics"

 

Composition (C)

This is how we compose the photographs either while we capture the moment or through post-processing (usually cropping the photo). In other terms, we can say it as photographer's perspective of the subject and its surroundings. There are various rules and techniques which helps us to compose the photographs. Composition is the creative part of the photography. 

Following images gives a glimpse of different composition techniques... 



For more composition tips, please visit the link "Composition Tips"

I highly recommend everyone of you read through the reference link mentioned below that has tons of information which helped me to learn photography easily. 

More basics on photography is covered in Basics of Photography - Part II 


References