Saturday, May 31, 2008

What's an F Stop?

Ok Folks... when I said I was beginner I wasn't lying. I'm reading all about what is takes to make a create photo and I'm being bombarded by phrases such as F Stop, Aparture, Shutter Speed, ISO. What do these mean? Heck if I know! I'm working on finding out. Today I'm trying to tackle the question, "What is F stop?"

I stole this excerpt, written nicely in every jargon from Matthew Cole's homepage.

"My favorite analogy for exposure is filling a bucket of water. A bucket is of fixed size and needs a certain amount of water to fill it, just like film, which is of a set film speed and needs a certain amount of light to capture an image. To fill your bucket, you can pour a small stream of water for a long time or a fast stream of water for a short time. Either way, you end up with the same amount of water. In photography, the size of the stream of the water is analogous to the f/stop, the length of time you pour is analogous to the shutter speed, and the size of the bucket is analogous to the film speed. Broadly speaking, from the bucket's point of view, it doesn't matter which combination of stream size and length of time you choose as long as the right amount of water ends up coming in. Film is the same; within limits, it is indifferent to the combination of time and amount of light as long as the right amount of light eventually arrives"

He goes on to explain the technical aspect of F stop also.

1 comment:

BettyWestern said...

Hi Sara

I'm in the same boat! I bought the D70 last year and it's automatic settings will make a photographer out of you (not that you look like you need any help). My advice (which I have still to follow) is play around with it for a couple of months before trying to work out all the techniques available. Then either book yourself on a course or buy the Dummies Guide to Digital SLRs!

There are some fantastic photographers in Blogland (I recommend Durham Township lady click through from my homepage) but as with all pictures, it's what you see and the moment you capture. For example your pic of the dog on the lead is great for the perpective the path gives.

Anyway, have fun and don't F* Stop! :-)