Wednesday, June 15, 2011

How to use the panning effect to photos?

Pictures of objects in motion are always a challenge for camera and photographer: cars, running football player or animals often appear slightly blurred.

In such a case, the experienced photographer speaks of the so-called "entrainment" effect. If the distance to the object is small, the movement could make it difficult to focus at close range and thus delay the release. Alternatively, you can switch to aperture priority (AV) with 1:6:3-aperture: The smaller aperture can compensate for the inaccuracy in focusing at least in part.

The exposure time is such photos in about 1 / 60 second. Too short but it should not be, since the recording acts otherwise be frozen and any momentum is lost. Too long a shutter speed leads to a strong blur to the photo makes it unusable as a rule. About the ISO number, you can make the right speed and aperture combination pretty quickly identified. In general, however as usual: Just try it out. Customize accordingly several test shots and adjust the individual parameters gradually up to the "racing line" on.

Title Post: How to use the panning effect to photos?
Rating: 100% based on 2069 ratings. 5 user reviews.
Author: the Wicaksonos Family

Thank you for visiting DiGiView - DIGITAL CAMERA REVIEW

Could not find what you were looking for?