Daily Deviation
Given 2009-11-06
Shutter Speed, Aperture, ISO by ~
Tiberius47 provides a thorough explanation of camera functions & settings. I strongly feel that every aspiring photographer should give this detailed tutorial a good read, and not pass it up! (written by suggester) (
Suggested by !Studio-Snafu and Featured by
`LawrenceDeDark )
Thanks
In your lens, the G means that i doesn't have an aperture ring. Many older lenses had a ring on the lens itself that you turned in order to set a specific aperture. These days, the aperture value is controlled from the camera, so such rings aren't required.
As to why you can't get lower than f5.6 on your lens... The lens is labelled with two different aperture values. They both represent the widest aperture that is available on your lens. The first value (f3.5) is the widest aperture value you can get when the lens is zoomed out. The second value (f5.6) is the widest aperture you can get when you are zoomed all the way in. If you can't get anything wider than f5.6, then you are probably trying to do it when the lens is zoomed in. Try zooming out and you should be able to get a faster aperture. Many more expensive lenses have a constant aperture that doesn't change in this manner. Most of my lenses are constant f2.8 lenses, and I can keep them at f2.8 zoomed out and zoomed in.
As for the focus mode, it really depends on what you are taking pictures of. You manual will explain the differences between the different modes. However, as a guide, I generally keep my camera's focus mode at single shot (I use a Canon, not nikon, so the names are different.) it sounds like Single Servo is the Nikon version of that. But like I said, do a bit of reading about what the different modes do and you'll soon learn which focus mode is best in a particular situation.
If you are going to take photos, you'll need to get as much light into the camera as possible. You'll need to use a higher ISO, a wide aperture and a slow shutter speed. A monopod or a tripod will also be helpful, as will image stabilisation.
Flash is one thing you won't need. It won't work if you are a long way from the stage, and even if it does, you'll be destroying the ambient light.
Use manual mode. With lights going on and off, it will wreak havoc with the camera's metering.
And don't shoot if there are lasers!
As for the settings you suggested, I think you'll need even more light. Put your ISO on maximum and use as slow a shutter speed as you can.