From the direction this has taken, am I to assume that you are one of the "minimum ISO always" type?Agree, but it is the sensitivity of the ISO that governs the sensor. That's why it's better to be in control of the sensor rather than letting Auto ISO running away with it !
That's the reason to learn manual mode first... for most, application is easier/better than theory.You DO need to learn exposure and you need to learn how your camera meters......
That's the reason to learn manual mode first... for most, application is easier/better than theory.
You can be... once you've learned it. I suppose you're both right, you could learn exposure using any mode... but I don't think most do, not really.except that you are equally applying exposure theory in Av, TV or P
She may have marked my economics paper, would explain my grades less embarrassingly than the alternative explanationMy thoughts exactly - but Tit or not Lauren needs to do it his way if shes going to get top marks
When i was at uni (not photography) we had a lecturer who was incredibly left wing , the only way to get good grades from her was to write essays on the plan right wing bad , left wing good and throw in some quotes from Das Kapital , or Che etc ... it grated but there was no point in defying her on principal and failing
When i was at uni (not photography) we had a lecturer who was incredibly left wing , the only way to get good grades from her was to write essays on the plan right wing bad , left wing good and throw in some quotes from Das Kapital , or Che etc ... it grated but there was no point in defying her on principal and failing
I was pretty much self taught from John Hedgecoe's books , and although my first controllable camera had no option other than M (it was an old ilford fixed lens thing that used to belong to my dad) as soon as I bought a modern SLR I started using AV most of the time.
End of the day there's not much difference between the PASM modes as end of the day its always about getting a correctly exposed shot