dewdew wrote:
...i'm glad my Digi-cam has AUTO on the dial......
what do the P or the a/s/m setting on the dial do....any ideas MARX.
I need numbers ...like....what setting for catching fireworks....and smoke or early morning fog.....I also would like to know how to stop the DELAY in the pic snap....My kids only pose for a very short time...after the 3 sec wait..they are doing something else.....Makes uploading quick.... out of 10 pics...they only stay still for maybe 3 of them.
Yes i did read the manual...but....it was like reading Shakespear.....i am still not sure who shot who.
As Volkswes and edovan kindly pointed out
P is mostly auto
A is aperture
S is shutter priority
M is manual
The aim of the game on M is to set your speed to your needs or your aperture and then try to make the light meter hit the center. A fun if not tedious task.
A (or Av on some cams) Assumes you want the average exposure (on my cam i set the exposure value on the secondary) and you set your Aperture size, and then your camera makes it work for the time value. (The problem with this mode is you may end up with camera shake or blur if the ISO does not allow you to use a faster shutter speed. You may end up on something ridiculous like 1 whole second for a snap. However you can control your depth of field some what more easily. Used for more artistic shots)
S (or Tv, Time value) Has emphasis on your shutter speed, (also assumes you want a centered light-meter and again you can set it on most cameras) The camera will automatically set your aperture so you hit that light meter preset. (The problem with this mode is obviously with the focus being on time and not on light amount you don't get to play with your depth of field but you can control the amount of blur. Mostly used for catching action)
P is simply set your light meter to your intended exposure and the camera does the rest to hit it at its optimum.
A-dep Available on the Canon automatically tries to extend to the optimum depth of field based on several focus points that you set. all aperture and speed settings adjust to that. And again the light meter is based on what you want.
ISO adds more and more grain to your image. if you want a good contrast you want a lower ISO but if its a moment in time your catching you can't afford a lower ISO.
"No flash shots, it takes away the right colours and gives to much contrast"
(Errm flash shots flatten the image and remove shadows and contrast, But I understand about the delay)
The trick to getting your settings right is to take a snap before they want their photo taken usually find a good spot, take an auto snap on time value and then once you got the settings down turn it to manual and recreate the settings. That way the computer doesn't do much thinking and therefore, takes your snap time down.
Take one on manual and then turn it back to auto and take another, that way you make sure you have a fast snap and an auto snap to compare.
My camera is: Canon EOS 450D