Microsoft 702 Photo Scanner User Manual


 
Microsoft Picture It! Companion Guide
19
Chapter 2: Making the Most of Your Camera
The water glass analogy
When taking a photograph, your goal is to achieve a perfect exposure. To create
the right exposure, you need to understand the relationship between the three
exposure factors: aperture, shutter speed, and ISO rating. Achieving perfect
exposure can be compared to filling a glass completely without spilling any of
the water. For a perfect exposure, the glass should become completely full with
no water spilling over. In this analogy, the tap symbolizes the aperture: the
wider the tap is open, the faster the glass fills up. The time that the tap is open
represents the shutter speed: leaving it open longer lets more water into the
glass. To fill the glass to exactly the right level, the rate of flow must be set
according to the time the tap is open.
The third factor, ISO rating, can be equated to the size of the water glass. A
smaller glass, representing a faster ISO rating, fills up more quickly than a
larger glass, representing a slow ISO.
Understanding automatic exposure
As a photographer, you will come across a wide range of lighting conditions,
and each condition requires that you adjust your camera to different exposure
settings. For example, shooting a photo on a beach on a sunny day calls for
different exposure settings than shooting on the same beach on a cloudy day.
For many conditions, the cameras automatic exposure setting gives you good
or even excellent results. But for some situations, the automatic exposure does
not perform as well.
Automatic exposure assumes that the scene you are photographing has a few
bright spots, many midtones, and a few dark areas. As the cameras meter reads
the available light in your scene, it averages the light in the bright, middle, and
dark areas, and then calculates the exposure necessary to bring the average
level to a tone of medium brightness called middle gray.