Added: 3 years ago
From: ulufilms
Views: 133,725
Sort by time | Sort by thread (beta)

Link to this comment:

Share to:
see all

All Comments (51)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • Thanks for this. You have an incredibly pleasant speaking voice/articulation ability.

  • The shutter is not the mirror. Stop teaching people nonsense stuff popped out of your head. And maybe apologize. :p

  • Hey I may be going in the army. If i take photos of like people running or people firing there weapons. So the photographs do not blur, should I have a a camera with a fast or slow shutter speed ?

  • @Dannyboy031993 You will want to use a "fast" shutter speed. I recommend setting the camera to "Tv" mode (shutter priority) and using a shutter speed of 1/60th or 1/125th of a second or faster, if you have enough light. Using Tv mode allows you to set the shutter speed and have the camera adjust the ISO and aperture automatically.

    Good luck,and stay safe.

  • @ulufilms Thank you, I am not a professional nor am I experienced so thanks for the advice.

    Thanks I will try

  • So it is better to have a slow shutter-speed if you take night photos?

  • if i have an automatic camera and just set the Fstop/ aperture, does it set the shutter speed for me automatically too?????

  • i have nikon D70 but the problem is my shutter speed write error on my display is like bulb. can you help me? what the problem.

  • haloooo>>>>>>>see my channel

  • In second 10 you stated that the shutter is the mirror between the lens and the sensor... NO! The shutter is located behind the mirror. First the mirror flips up after the shutter button is depressed, then the shutter opens (a focal plane curtain), the sensor is exposed, shutter closes, then mirror drops back down.....

  • If I want to film with the canon EOS 550D and I want to film quick dance moves... How high must be the shutterspeed and what do I have to change about the aperture and ISO?

    best regards.

  • @sadapindo I would recommend a shutter speed of at least 1/100 and shooting at 60fps. If that doesn't work as well as you had hoped, just experiment with different shutter speeds until you get the desired result.

  • @ulufilms ahh thnx:D

  • @MrKaramjbara ... I've never heard of this camera, but you can probably change the shutter speed to a number of different settings. Refer to the manual that came with it for exact specifications.

  • @ulufilms Hi. I was wondering if you could help me out. Why i do my pics get overexposed or i get an almost white pic when i increase the shutter speed. I am trying to shoot moving water to create that cool misty effect. Can you please help ?

  • @tuberjunkie Whenever you slow down the shutter speed (i.e., longer duration, let more light in), you have to compensate by closing down the aperture an equal number of f-stops. The easiest way, however, to create a misty-water effect is to set your camera to Shutter Priority (Sv) and then set your desired shutter speed (1 sec or 2 perhaps); on this setting, you can control the shutter speed and the camera will automatically adjust Aperture and ISO for you.

  • @ulufilms Thanks for taking the time to answer my question.

  • I don't know if it matters to anyone, but the mirror is not the shutter. The shutter is behind the mirror. In this video you can actually see the shutter close before the mirror goes back down. His camera has a focal plane shutter... focal plane. the mirror is not the focal plane. The mirror just has to move before the shutter opens.

  • @cp10111 I've mentioned this error several times in the comments here and in video itself (see the overlay text, and the video description itself). I just misspoke during filming and didn't catch the error until after I uploaded the film.

  • TV? On the Camera? I don't think so... :D

  • @nikstyles Canon cameras have TV and TL.. etc,,,, Nikons have M A S P

  • @mykatamari really? wow ... ;)

  • @nikstyles you betcha!

  • @mykatamari i hope that!

  • Thanks for the tips very heplful.

  • Comment removed

  • Comment removed

  • thanx bro..

  • Good man!

  • awesome mate, good on you. short and sweet

  • Very good little explanation. Thanks.

  • Thank you very very very much. This is fantastic information explained in a simple but yet technical way.

  • Amazingly, that is by far the simplest explanation that I have learned about Bulb and how to use it...

  • ok i uderstood now

  • Thank you so much for this. I have started to like photography a lot, however my teacher does not teach us important things like this. Now that I understand what I'm doing, I will start to enjoy it again. (:

  • oy mate ..

    What you need is to make the aperture bigger .. so that you get more light or the Iso should go up .. if it was 100 make it 200 and finally the shutter speed try to make it abit slow and the pic won't be dark any more ..

    any questions ask me

  • have you ever heard of Shutter Speed : 211/1 second?

  • That it's a sensor or film.

  • Hi,

    can someone tell me how to let more light into my shots. I've got an XTI canon and all my photos come in dark. I then end up fixing in photoshop. please help

  • @eregor145

    aperture should be wider ....

    make it wider ... and if its already wide ... this lower the shutter ... try to always make both of them even ... too much of both withh be too dark or too light ... so even them out ...

  • sexy jewish dude! loves it

  • @gogoutube

    Oh Please!

  • You are very sexy too! Oh yes.

  • The mirror is not the shutter.

  • ya thanks fella

  • thanks fella.

  • dude love the fast info. i've looked everywhere for this info and you got it within 90 seconds. great job. btw the first hello sounds a lil like microsoft sam. anyway thanks for the great tips

  • very informative... thanks for sharing.. eagerly waiting for the next part...

  • thanks.

    looking forward for the 2nd part.

Loading...
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more