Beth |
Freezing water fountains & falls can anyone recommend a general shutter speed and aperture setting for freezing a water fountain or fall? and also for a stream?
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Bob Cammarata |
That depends on how close you are to the stream or falls and how fast the water is moving. (Vertical falls move faster than water tumbling through rapids.) Generally speaking, 1/250 or faster should freeze anything.
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Beth |
Thank you for your response. I was wondering what the general rule of thumb is for aperture. I have read a lot, but it still sort of confuses me. I mean about which aperture to use with which shutter speed. Any recommended online reading?
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David A. Bliss |
About 32 degrees ;-)
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Brendan Knell |
First, you do want to freeze it, not get that silky effect, right? Just want to make sure, as more people want to know how to get the silky effect rather than freeze it. For shutter speed, I would do as Bob says, and about 1/250. Then for aperature, you most likely you want to get everything in focus, so a smaller aperature, but not your camera's smallest, would be best. The reason that I don't reccomend the smallest you camera has is that I've heard most camera's aren't at their sharpest at their largest or smallest aperature, so you'll want to go about 1-2 stops larger or smaller. So for example, my camera's smallest aperature is F/8.0, so I would want to use F/7.1-F6.3. So it depends on your camera's minimum aperature.
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