Travel Magazine

Camera Settings & Things You Should Know

By Huntsends

It is a known fact that photographers who shoot for Bengali wedding photography mostly go for the automatic mode in their camera. But, if you are a little brave and try setting your camera to the manual mode so that you can have that creative liberty of adjusting the exposure and get more control over it. And yes, it will take long to perfectly capture a photo. However, since you are in control, you can take bengali wedding photography and make them turn out exactly how you want it to be.

Anyway, although you still need to know the settings in your camera that you should work on. So, here they are:

Adjustment of ISO

ISO is a camera setting (that your DSLR also has) that measures and stabilizes the sensitivity of the image's sensor. The most important thing about setting up the ISO in your camera is that it should be always be kept at an all-time low. The most camera always has their ISO at a hundred, and some DSLR's even have a lowest native ISO of as much as sixty-four. You must wonder why. Let us tell you, if you set your ISO low, you would see that your photos have less noise in it. That is, lower ISO would make your images less grainy.

Aperture Setting

Aperture is usually the opening in front of the lens that lets the light (that forms the picture) pass through it. Aperture is important because it improves your Bengali wedding photography by many folds. Say you want the background to be not in the frame and be out of focus, you would want to keep the aperture at f/1.4-1.5.

Now, if you want the background to be more in focus and the photo to be sharper and at the same time a clearer image for the Bengali wedding photography. Then, what you should do is, you should up the aperture by two or three knots than your minimum aperture. This way you would get the clear and sharp shot that you want.

Shutter Speed

Make sure you have got a quick enough shutter speed to eliminate camera shake once handholding the camera, and subject movement once you're employing a tripod. For portraits of 1 person set your aperture between f/2 and f/4. If you don't have a lens that can't take photographers in wide, invest in a good old 50mm f/1.8. It's cheap and super versatile and good for Bengali wedding photography.

Employing a wide aperture like this can assist you to make the background blurry and less distracting. I could offer you a rule here, like "Always shoot portraits at f/5.6", however, I'm not planning to. What I will be able to do is offer you starting points, then you need to think it through and make the necessary changes as per the shots you are going to take.

Do watch out for shooting too wide open like f/1.8 or f/1.4 if you have those settings. The depth of field is so narrow that you have to be very precise with your focus or you could find yourself with their eyes sharp and their nose and ears out of focus. However, if you like that look and can nail your focus - select it. If not select a rather smaller aperture alternative of f/2.8 or f/4 for the Bengali wedding photography.

ISO & Aperture (More Settings in Detail)

For portraits, you want the very best image quality possible. Therefore, for setting up the ISO, set it as low as you can to avoid excess noise and fuzziness in your photos. Select somewhere between ISO 100 and 400. However, having said that, you also need to maintain a usable shutter speed.

If your image is fuzzy because of either subject or camera movement it's irrelevant how noise-free it is. I suggest you begin at ISO 400 and change as necessary. Meaning, if you're shooting in the shade, low light, or inside using window light you'll likely need to increase that. Don't be afraid to use ISO 800 or maybe 1600 if you need to. However, bear in mind you'll also open up your aperture if the light is low. For example, for shooting indoors in low-light, you can set the ISO at 1600, with f/4 at 1/200 th for the drone wedding photography.

Manual Mode

What camera mode (Auto or Manual) to shoot in is your next huge decision to make. I will tell you what modes I use for various things. It's pretty straightforward actually - simply follow these guidelines:

  1. If your camera is on a tripod, shoot in Manual Mode.
  2. When you're shooting hand-held, shoot in Aperture Priority.
  3. I would say to follow the above ninety-five percent of the time.

So employing a tripod also includes things like shooting HDR bracketed shots, night photography, and any long exposures. The sole exception I will think of is when I need to utilize panning in a shot. Then I switch to Shutter Priority.

Okay now that you're in Manual Mode, I'll tell you why I like to recommend this. As I already mentioned above, employing a tripod forces you to slow down. Well so does shooting in Manual Mode, in a way, so that they work well together.

But, the other thing that shooting in Manual does is, it permits you to decide on all of your settings and they won't change - even though the lighting or other factors change around you. That also suggests that you may have very consistent exposures from one frame to the following.


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