Manual Mode shotting for Canon
So this past weekend at LAX I was talking to a fellow Canonite and we were chatting about how we shoot. We both have 30D's and I was saying that sometimes I have a bit of trouble with the exposure. So he said he shoots in "M" mode, not manual focusing mode but manual mode where you can select both the F stop and the shutter speed.
I gave it a try and I'm hooked. Shooting in M mode you hit the exposure perfectly every time. The catch is and you need to have fast fingers is to adjust the shutter speed correctly. If you look through the view finder you'll find the exposure meter. This meter moves to the plus and minus range as you pan. The plus region means it over espoused the minus means under. When its right in the middle the shot is correctly espoused.
Yes it’s a bit tuff at first to track a moving target and adjust the shutter speed but I was going through my pics from LA on my laptop and I can tell you this is the way to shoot. Yes I know you can shoot in RAW and adjust it later but I'd rather get it right the first time and learn to use the camera for what it can do. I'll post pictures when I get back from Cali but for you Canon users give it a try, not sure how the Nikon metering works but I'm sure it’s similar. Not one of my pictures from LAX was overexposed shooting this way.
Re: Manual Mode shotting for Canon
Quote:
Originally Posted by T-Bird76
If you look through the view finder you'll find the exposure meter. This meter moves to the plus and minus range as you pan. The plus region means it over espoused the minus means under. When its right in the middle the shot is correctly espoused.
so basically what you are doing is using the metering in the camera, but rather then make the camera do the exposure, you do the exact same (because you are looking at the exposure meter) but then manual. How does this change things?
Re: Manual Mode shotting for Canon
Quote:
Originally Posted by JRadier
Quote:
Originally Posted by T-Bird76
If you look through the view finder you'll find the exposure meter. This meter moves to the plus and minus range as you pan. The plus region means it over espoused the minus means under. When its right in the middle the shot is correctly espoused.
so basically what you are doing is using the metering in the camera, but rather then make the camera do the exposure, you do the exact same (because you are looking at the exposure meter) but then manual. How does this change things?
As you move the camera up and down on the horizon, the light changes and the setting of the camera change to keep the meter correct. If the plane get closer and gets bigger, it will change the light and the camera will try and compensate for this. White plane on a blue back round will change the light so the camera will compensate and may throw the exposure off...manual, you test...verify and keep the exact settings you want. I shoot manual with my 50mm lens at night.... I open up the lens and push the ISO and will set the shutter, if I like, I keep. When the light changes, I have to change because the camera will not.