Wow, thats two totally different schools of thought. I went out today and took my very first photos with a tripod. I was just using the manual mode without even thinking about it.
Can I post the pic here or do I need to make a new thread? In any case, my photo is coming soon! I would really appreciate a critique.
So.... I pretty much COMPLETELY disagree with soufiej.
If you want to take "snapshots" then just put the camera in automatic mode and click away.
But if you want to learn "photography" then you MUST learn "exposure". And there's really no better way to learn "exposure" then to read the fundamentals... and then go practice the fundamentals. The best way to do that is to learn to shoot in "manual" mode.
There's a possibility that last statement might be misunderstood... I very rarely shoot in "manual" mode. But I certainly know "how" to shoot in manual mode. I learned with a camera that not only did not have an automatic mode... it didn't even have a light meter. But if you don't understand the concept of the "exposure triangle" and light, then you won't understand "why" it's better to give priority to aperture or to shutter speed -- and that point you may as well just be shooting snapshots on full automatic mode.
I've certainly come across the "I only shoot in manual" snobbery -- and I'm absolute not suggesting that because 90% of the time my camera is aperture priority mode. But I understand when it's advantages to use aperture priority, when it's advantageous to use shutter priority. Yes, of course I also shoot in manual mode too -- when it's the appropriate mode.
But I still highly recommend that EVERYONE who wants to understand photography spend time learning about exposure and forcing yourself to learn to shoot in manual mode.
Don't be intimidated by the thought of it. Pick up a copy of Bryan Peterson's "Understanding Exposure" -- it's intended for beginners and he introduces all concepts in a way that beginner's would understand (he won't lose you by using lingo that only experienced photographers would know.)
I don't feel anyone has given you two even slightly different schools of thought.
So far, we have only discussed the technical craft of photography. Within the technical portion of photography, everyone really does agree.
Everyone has said, in one way or another, learn how exposure works. First and foremost, learn how exposure works.
Strive not for the point where you are shooting without thinking about it. Strive for the point where you have an idea of how you want the image to appear and your technical foundation allows you to dial in those settings.
Learn how the three legs of the exposure triangle work to find their own balance point. That is one of the most basic and fundamental lessons within photography as a craft.
I certainly agree with this.
I've never been particularly comfortable with the term "exposure triangle" because the explanation goes on to suggest that there are three thins you can change to get the exposure adjusted to something that works... and doesn't mention that you can also change the shooting circumstances (use supplemental lighting, use light modifiers, move the subject to a better location, shoot at a different time of day, etc.) There are usually more than just three things you can change to control the exposure.
Essentially all technical, there's very little about exposure that is not a pure numbers game. Yes, you have latitudes in determining the exposure you prefer for any one shot and you can - and probably will - alter exposure in some ways in post processing. However, if you are stumped by the numbers involved in exposure and how they work together, then you will have problems resolving the most basic issues of photography using any operational mode on your camera.
Learn exposure. That's what everyone has been saying.
Light is a aspect of physics. It's properties, how it moves through a lens, how it's recorded, how the camera treats the information being recorded... all of that is math. So, in a sense, it is "numbers game".
But certainly there's an artistic element which we probably tend to think of as not being math (technically it's still math). So for example... if I want to take an exposure in any given setting, there are a number combinations of aperture, shutter speed, and ISO which would result in the same amount of light being recorded on the sensor. But some combinations of settings will result in an image which looks more artistically appealing than others. In a landscape shot, usually a broad depth of field is preferred. In a portrait, often it's the shallow depth of field which is preferred. If it's a waterfall, perhaps it's the motion blur that's preferred. In sports, maybe it's the aspect of freezing the action which is preferred.
Regardless, it's understanding that some element of the exposure should have priority and *which* element has priority depends on the artistic needs of the shot.
Your semi-automatic modes can assist you in these lessons. They are faster and equally as accurate in 99% of the situations you will encounter. IMO, they are the precursor to using manual mode, not the afterthought. They are where you will very likely spend most of your time as a photographer.
This is where my approach differs and I disagree.
If someone were to tell you that there's this concept called addition and subtraction -- but you didn't actually ever practice the addition or subtraction because someone told you that a calculator could provide that the answers to any of those math problems... you're not really learning math. We could go on and on with similar examples by substituting in art or music... someone can explain how a piano, or guitar works, but unless you've practiced it, you'll never be able to play it.
It's the practicing of that fundamental thing at it's basic level that helps the concept "sink in" far beyond what would happen for just being told about something and then letting the computer do it for you automatically.
I am aware of the "I only shoot in manual mode" photographers. I'm not suggesting that a person should learn to shoot in manual and then only ever shoot in manual. I could go on to show situations where you'd probably get in trouble if you tried to shoot in manual (rapidly changing lighting situations where you'd just never keep up if you tried to manual adjust the exposure.) But there are times when shooting manual is probably the most expedient way to get something done (bracketed shooting, for example. I do a lot of astrophotography which really has to be done manually because the built-in meter would never work correctly for such a shot.)
IMO the difference between the advice you have been given comes down to how you best learn exposure. Do you do so by starting off, before you understand any other function of the camera, shooting in manual mode only? Do you do so by following the lead of another photographer - with another camera - and another thought process they use to formulate the final product?
A few say use manual to "force" yourself to learn exposure. No offense to those people but that sounds a bit like pushing the kid in the deep end of the pool. Sink or swim.
Ahhh! Perhaps we're closing in on the crux of the matter. "Sink or swim" almost suggests they'll drown and die if they don't succeed -- there's no life-or-death situation at risk here.
In my experience, people tend to learn
more from their
mistakes then they do from their successes. Confession time: I do actually
want a new photographer to go spoil some shots, because hopefully they'll wonder
why they spoiled those shots, and that's when they'll learn. If they push the button and the computer heavily tilts the odds of success in their favor, then the shot comes out and the photographer doesn't necessarily understand why. Did they really learn anything (other than that they should rely on the computer?)
It's not that I have anything against computers, but if you only ever rely on the computer (even in aperture or shutter priority mode) then your photography will still be a bit limited because the computer is setting exposures based on the meter and even the meter in the camera can be fooled.
Certainly, when cameras had no easy mulligans to fall back on with digital manipulations and back even when a photographer had to carry their own light meter, they had to learn how to calculate rules such as the "sunny 16 rule" and we carried swiveling cards with numeric readouts which we then learned to mix and match. For most photographers today, those are historic memories if they exist as memories at all.
We could miss the exposure to a degree and still recover in the darkroom. There were certain things that were more difficult to correct in a dark (more time consuming). We didn't get to digitally sharpen an image. Altering the exposure by use of dodging and burning techniques was more difficult because the photographic paper in the darkroom is "white" and you can't see the effect of dodging and burning until you develop the paper. That meant there was a lot of trial and error where you kept notes about what areas to dodge and burn... and for how many seconds, etc.
Certainly it was more cumbersome and time consuming to fix things in the darkroom... so it saved a LOT of time to get it right in the camera. But many things (not everything) could be fixed in the darkroom. A missed exposure wasn't necessarily a lost cause.
Modern DSLR's have sufficient resolving power in their light metering systems to deal with all but the most difficult lighting situations. Anything beyond that is simply the photographer's choice of which metering mode best suits the image the photographer has developed in their head.
That image in your head is very important because that is your target. Just twiddling dials and settings to come up with different is not.
Just using manual mode without thinking about the final image is not, IMO, the end goal you should be aiming at.
Just realizing selecting a specific metering mode makes a significant difference in the end result you see ... where?
On your camera's LCD review screen?
The results you see on that 3" screen are for quick review only. The older the camera, the lower the resolving power of the LCD. The lower the color resolution. The lower the dynamic range that can be displayed.
So, yes, you can use the screen to make generic changes and you can notice the difference in metering a scene with evaluative, center weighted or spot metering. However, unless you feel you are never going to do more with your photography than display it on a 3" LCD review screen, you need to be looking at your photos on a monitor screen.
If you have not yet reached the point where you are viewing your images at close to real world sizes, then you are trying to learn to cook without fire.
And, if you are viewing your images without the assistance of processing software, you are only reading the Cliff Notes version of your photography.
A well set up monitor will quickly and easily indicate the differences between your camera and a friend's camera. It will easily show you where the ISO leg of the exposure triangle begins to fail with your specific camera. And, depending on the file format you have used to capture the image and the software you have available, it will indicate the finer points of "exposure".
I'm trying to infer a meaning from this last section of your post and let me "check" you on this because it seems as if you are thinking "exposure" is all about getting the right amount of "light" for the image.
Exposure is much more than that. At a very primitive level, exposure is about getting the right amount of light. But if that's all you want then I'd agree that you should just put the camera on "Automatic" mode and leave it there. Changing metering modes doesn't change the creative nature of the exposure... it only changes which area of the frame was used to determine the exposure value.
When you shoot in "automatic" mode (or even in "program" mode) the camera follows an algorithm called the "program line". (There's a brief section on this page that talks about it:
Shooting modes - Canon Professional Network ) Basically the camera tries to take a "safe" exposure. It would prefer a low ISO, a middle f-stop, and a shutter speed that is fast enough for hand-held photography -- but it's willing to compromise based on the limits of the lens and lighting conditions, etc.
If lighting is especially poor, it will shoot with the f-stop at "wide open", very high ISO (if auto-ISO is enabled) and low shutter speed because you've backed it into a corner and it simply has no choice.
It puts some priority on getting the shutter speed up to a point where it's safe enough for hand-held photography. Once it achieves that point, it will start working other aspects of exposure, reducing ISO... and then bringing the f-stop away from wide-open.
When it arrives at the point where it could change anything... it will start reducing aperture size (increasing f-stop) and using a faster shutter speed in equal quantity. In other words it is going to use a "middle exposure" because that will tend to be the safe all-around exposure. But it will not necessarily be the exposure that does anything creative with the shot.
The "scene" modes are essentially "automatic" modes that would otherwise follow the program line, except they tweak the bias based on the needs of the shot (landscape shots will go for broad depth of field. Action shots will go for fast shutter speed. Portrait shots will go for shallow depth of field, etc.)
When you set the camera on "Program" mode it will follow the "program line" (just like full auto mode) except it will let you perform "program shift" (trading stops of aperture against stops of shutter speed.)
But the reason you might want to perform a "program shift" is for the creative element of the exposure... because you know you want to blur motion or set a shallow depth of field for selective subject focus and blur everything else. Note that the total amount of "light" received is still intended to be the same -- so the histogram for the shots will probably also be about the same -- and yet the effect it has on the image you get after taking the shot will be completely different.
Real world example: I have a friend who wanted to learn photography and I started him with the exposure basics. He was having difficult with the concept of "depth of field" and how changing the f-stop has an effect on this (along with focal length and focused distance). He heard the words... but it wasn't sinking in until I made him put the camera into manual mode, line up a row of wine bottles each spaced about 1' apart, and then move to one end of the row and a perspective shot down the row while varying the aperture between each shot. He inspected the resulting image and suddenly it all becomes clear to him that just because the meter reading was "the same" does not mean the shot is "the same". The specific exposure settings selected actually do matter and while people will say "there's no right exposure" (a cop-out of the art world that even something miserably gone wrong can be called "art") frankly there is an exposure which will be better than all the others.
When I do food shots, I shoot tethered with the camera on a tripod and manual focus. I will literally shoot a dozen shots of the very same "angle" or composition of the food while I vary light and aperture. All of these have tack-sharp food... but what I'm really critiquing is the background -- which is as important as the "subject" -- so we can decide which exposure creates the mood the want, compliments the atmosphere, and doesn't act as a distraction. It is usually never either the shot with the most in focus... nor is it usually the shot with the highest amount of blur possible.
With a digital camera, unless you are intending only to show your photos on, say, social media, your learning curve within photography does not stop at the camera. Once you've begun to get a handle on your camera and the rules of photography, you must also learn the ins and outs of bringing your image to a format than can be shown outside of your camera.
You are, at the moment, learning in what I would consider a rather slap-dash, scattershot method. Possibly, you have more of a plan that I can detect.
You are, IMO, learning to work with tools without having a complete set to pull form.
Your camera is the single most significant hardware you have to work with. Which is why I feel you should be learning what your camera can and cannot achieve within the rules of photography. Then you must take that knowledge beyond your camera and prepare an image for display. Complete the process. It will teach you about the entire plan within modern photography.
Displaying the image is steering into a completely different topic where learning about color-space (gamut), and the properties of display medium are important.
Back in the fundamentals of "exposure" -- I remain convinced that in order to learn exposure, a new photographer should practice shooting in manual. BTW, I'm also not one to tell people just go shoot randomly. I prefer to send people out with some specific goals... "get shots that freeze fast action" or "get shots that imply motion by creative use of blur" or "get shots that isolate the subject by using a shallow depth of field". If you shoot randomly, you might capture some great results but if you didn't deliberately intend to get those results then you might not entirely understand "why" you got those results (so have you really learned anything if you still don't know "why"?) That's why I prefer to send people out with a goal.
In art classes, you would probably (at some point) be forced to draw or paint a bowl of fruit... not because the fruit is so amazing, but because learning the techniques will reinforce behaviors that get you results you want in later works.
So yes... go take that boring shot of the fire hydrant... and when you do... get a shot where nothing is in focus EXCEPT the fire hydrant, and get another shot where the sidewalk is focused all the way back to infinity, etc. and your shot of the fire hydrant will actually be a worthwhile study in fundamentals of exposure. But if you do this while learning and you use an automatic mode, I think you'll get an acceptable image... I just don't think you'll have learned as much.
Once you're getting not simply good results in manual... but shots where you are in full control of the outcome and you know it with confidence... now you can stop shooting in manual and use the automatic modes. I only occasionally shoot entirely in manual mode. All the modes are on your camera for a reason and there's a time when each of them probably has an advantage over the other modes.