Shutterspeed 

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  • Taken at my friend’s apartment, this photo was a collective effort. :) It’s an eerie perspective on an interesting location. I find the long shutterspeed usually gives photos a more dreamlike appearance.

  • Lake in the Netherlands

  • abstract sunset image of ocean and rocks taken with a slow shutterspeed

  • this is a slowed shutterspeed image of the Side show ride The Speed. / took a few shots of this to get a good stable image. i didnt have a tripod on me, and it was quite cold so i was shaking a bit. i used a 3.5 second shutter speed for this one.

  • This is a time release of the sideshow ride ‘The Hangover’ / i didnt have a tripod, coz its the show and all, and it took a few shots to get something i liked. / enjoy

  • Pretty leaves, I set my camera to a slowish shutterspeed and then whooshed my camera along the leaf. I kind of liked the result!

  • Towards the River Tweed, Scotland.

  • I’ve driven past this fountain for over 7 years and twice before attempted to take photographs of it – once during the day and once at night. The daytime shots were OK and basically showed the fountain in its setting: a large and pretty golf course. I tried to isolate the fountain but its location pretty much prevented that. The nighttime shots were a bit different and hid the greens and fairways of the golf course well while actuating the fountain. Unfortunately, I wasn’t anywhere near up to the challenge of capturing the shot until last week. The difference this time was the combined usage of NO ISO boosting, proper aperture, and much slower shutter speeds. I pulled up the shutter time to a full 29.1 seconds by using the “BULB” setting instead of a preset shutter speed. The D80 will make a 30 second open shutter but I tried it for about 30 minutes and was never satisfied until I found the “sweet spot” at a touch over 29 seconds manually. To offset that much light coming into my Nikkor 18-35 kit lens, I set the exposure bias (what I always call the ‘offset’) to -5 and the camera automatically upped that to -6, tho I don’t know why or how. LOL! Finally, the aperture was set at f/36, much smaller than I’d ever tried before. But the slower shutter speed mandated constant light for a long time so I shrunk the lens opening quite the opposite as I would have with shooting the moon or nighttime buildings. It took a bit over 1 hour for me to eventually get the settings the way I wanted them, lock the tripod down as securely as possible, and use the remote trigger to trip the shutter release. (Using my hand, no matter how carefully, caused shake that blurred the image enough to see.) One other important thing of note: my focal length was 42 mm because I used the kit lens, the wide angle Nikkor that came with the camera. This made the fountain a LOT smaller in the finished shot instead of filling the frame as I used to do using a telephoto lens. The difference there was the PhotoShop Elements program I used to make the shot large enough for Red Bubble but do absolutely nothing else. I had been trying to get the largest shot out of the camera and enlarge less in post-shoot processing. I now know that putting a smaller but better image into the software is far preferable to putting in a large image that sucks anyway. LOL! I hope some of this makes sense to the budding photographers new to DSLR shooting. And as usual, I give enormous credit to the work and comments of oastudios, a master of getting the balance between water and light perfectly. SEE HIS STUFF!

  • Silverstone 24 hour britcar race 2007. messing around with shutter speeds.

  • Something totally different, I have never tried this before: being experimentive with shutterspeed.

  • After an unco-operative heron abandoned me when I had him set up in front of a half-submerged boat, I turned my attention to the ducks. I wanted to try some really fast shutter speeds, so since I had full sun and ducks acting like ducks, I set up to try to stop those fast wings and water splashes. I set my aperture wide open AND moved my ISO from 100 (where I usually leave it) to 400. The resulting shutter speeds were 800 and up… I’m VERY happy with the results :) /

  • For anyone familiar with ducks, you KNOW that they will do their “stretch and flap” thing many times a day. So I knew I had a sure thing to shoot as I wanted to try to stop some fast action with high shutter speeds. While I have NO CLUE how the camera makers can manufacture a camera to shoot for 1/800th of a second, or 1/2500th, I can now happily say that it works! Of course I was paying the ducks very well for their modelling service; their cheques are in the mail… honest! :) /

  • Skeletal abstract photograph Violinist Owen ‘Final Fantasy’ Pallett plays Newtown’s Vanguard 12/12/2008

  • Shooting along Tremont, we Finally have some water in our rivers, due to a very nice rain season for the year, definitely beats last year of 2007’s drought. / I was playing around with shutterspeed on this showing a new photographer friend of mine from Ohio what the different settings produce. I am trying to get Lou here on the bubble, I didnt warn him about the addiction tho :) / Great thing about digital, we can experiment all we want, and just delete if we dont like. So I am always up for experimenting, especially when my subject isnt taking off in the woods. I shot this in shutterspeed priority / SS set at 1/4th of a second / F-stop at F29 / ISO at 100 / Focal length at 187mm / Exposure Comp at -0.3

  • Camera basics- aperature and shutter speed
    by Ted Widen

    I wrote this for a friend who has a new camera. When I offered to help her learn things, she said that she is still confused about the ba…

    This is a plain-language explanation of the two main adjustments we use on our cameras, the aperature and the shutter speed, and how they affect each other.

  • this will be an entrant for shutterbug hopefully.

  • And i said please, please don’t exist.

  • .

  • Jockeys in the homestretch at Thistledown Racetrack, Cleveland, Ohio

  • Lough Derg, Ballina, Co Clare, Ireland

  • this is another photo i have took during my project ” time” Captured with a pentax K1000 ( film photograph )

  • Getting a chance to shoot with Marianne Venegoni, Tony Pierce, and a couple of other friends (they aren’t on RB) at Elkmont. / If you go down the dirt road past the summer homes there, you can find this little jewel right along side the road. Usually after it’s rained alittle you can find this running quite nicely. / Always fun to play around with slow shutterspeed on water if lighting is just right. Best if viewed larger. / Shot this in SS mode / SS set at 1/4th of a sec / ISO at 100 / Fstop at F8 / Exposure comp at -0.3 / Focal length at 85mm Shot this with a prime 85mm lens, usually used for portraits. Marianne shouldn’t ever tell me I can’t do something with a lens :)

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