
Thanks
Peter
I use Aperture Priority almost always, and just keep an eye on shutter speed to make sure it's within the sensible range that Mike mentioned. If you clamp the shutter to 1/250, it will never go faster than that even if the conditions allow - bright sunshine, say. Sometimes it may even refuse to take the shot if it can't make the aperture small enough to maintain that shutter speed, presumably.peterc wrote:what I am currently playing with is using shutter priority around the 250 mark. If I don't set the ISO the camera seems always set it to 100 or 125. Maybe aperture priority is more relevant to control depth of field?
I take my hat off to you, Jack. I found in the film days I learned nothing! Unless you kept very detailed notes about what settings you used it was impossible to correlate changing a setting with the results you got back some weeks later.Jack Harrison wrote:I am very odd (no follow up comments needed) in that a great deal of the pleasure I get out of photography is playing with settings: ISO, Aperture, shutter speed, etc. I started taking photographs over 60 years ago and had to understand all those things (nothing automated in the 1950s).
Good advice for SLRs and DSLRs but not applicable to cameras with small sensors, eg bridge (Panasonic Lumix 150, etc) or compacts. These are usually limited to f/8 as smaller apertures (bigger numbers such as f/11) would give significant and undesirable diffraction. For small sensor camera, f/4 is the "starting" equivalent to the f/8 recommended for a larger sensor camera.The old quote 'f/8 and be there' (originally applied to photojournalism) is not a bad place to start.
Absolutely - I was finding it boring using Intelligent Auto ModeJack Harrison wrote:I am very odd (no follow up comments needed) in that a great deal of the pleasure I get out of photography is playing with settings: ISO, Aperture, shutter speed, etc. I started taking photographs over 60 years ago and had to understand all those things (nothing automated in the 1950s).
The modern generation can get away with knowing nothing about any of those basics. However I would say to peterc: you could well get a lot of unexpected enjoyment with some old-fashioned experimentation.
Jack
Thank you very much, Mike. Review of the lens is very helpful especially in regard to sharpness.MikeOxon wrote:Again, I agree with dilettante - I usually use aperture priority mode and then check that the shutter speed is reasonable - faster than 1/100s.
Reviews of your lens suggest that it is none too sharp, wide open,and that f/8 is the optimum aperture. See http://www.dpreview.com/reviews/PanasonicDMCG2/13
Mike