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That article's interesting, a couple of things I don't agree with, but it's good to see other ways of thinking about it. One good point it makes is how being able to adjust iso is such an advantage over the days of film when your iso rating was effectively fixed for the next 36 shots (though I suppose you could also push/pull film). Otoh in a way that was a simpler time and now you have makes one more factor to think about (I know autoISO takes the thinking out of it but there is an aesthetic aspect still attached to the iso setting)(I also disagree that really high iso's are absolutely fine, at least on my body, I find 3200 is the highest I usually like to go).
Interestingly, the article says that in auto ISO mode with auto shutter (equiv to P-mode I guess?) it will first set ISO to minimum, and select and appropriate shutter speed. If the shutter speed reaches the (user defined) minimum setting then it will increase the ISO up to the maximum. Fine, but then,
This checks out, and is what gets me. Why have a minimum shutter speed then disregard it (ok, I can see the logic)? It's probably the reason I ended up using shutter priority, as you can easily correct for a bit of underexposure, but not motion blurring.
In any case, I 100% agree with the last part: Practice. And then practice more. |
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