4. ISO- Sensitivity of sensor/film
This tells the camera how sensitive the sensor should
be to light. This setting allows you get decent
pictures under any lighting situations.
5. Higher ISO’s (800-1600)
Set high for darkly lit scenes
Higher ISO’s usually produce more noise,
which degrades the image quality.
7. WB-White balance
AWB-Auto white balance works for most situations.
Use the settings for specific lighting situations,
if your images start to look to too red, blue, or yellow.
14. Image Stabilization
Image stabilizers help you shoot at
slow shutter speeds, but you still
may need to stabilize yourself, use
a monopod, tripod, or lean against
something.
15. Av- Aperture Priority
Set your f-stop and the camera sets the
shutter speed for proper exposure
F-stop controls depth of field
Pay attention to the shutter speed
too slow=blurry pictures
16.
17.
18.
19. Program
o This is an automatic setting on a DSLR.
This means it will give you choices that
are all “good” exposures, but depth
of field and the ability to freeze your
action depends on what your choice
you make.
20. In program mode, be aware of your shutter speed/f-stop
combination. When you are shooting action, always choose the
combination with the shutter speed at 1/250 second or faster.
Otherwise, your action will blur like in this example.
21. Manual
Use manual only if you know how to
read the light meter and you don’t
mind changing your settings for every
shot
22. In manual mode, you control the shutter speed/f-stop combination
based on what the light meter is tells you.
23. Manual is a challenging setting to use, but it might be the only
way to get a good exposure in difficult lighting situations.