Robin Usagani
Been spending a lot of time on here!
- Joined
- Jun 6, 2010
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- Denver, CO
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- Photos OK to edit
exposure triangle is basic though. This is beyond basics section 

You can no more forget ISO than you can shutter speed or aperture. There ARE three factors involved, not two. Each with distinct advantages and disadvantages.Just as a for instance, suppose we forget ISO for the moment.
I wouldn't stand for it, if I were you. You should drop everything else and devote your life to destroying this terrible idea of the "exposure triangle". It's truly that important.
You cant change it on the fly on digital cameras either, it usually involves ugly menu surfing on really every digital camera I've checked out so far.go analog, with film, it's what you loaded, so much simpler, you can't change on the fly. :thumbup:
LOL! You're so funny ...!!You cant change it on the fly on digital cameras either, it usually involves ugly menu surfing on really every digital camera I've checked out so far.go analog, with film, it's what you loaded, so much simpler, you can't change on the fly. :thumbup:
.............You cant change it on the fly on digital cameras either, it usually involves ugly menu surfing on really every digital camera I've checked out so far.
.............Kill The Exposure Triangle.
No, and nor is it meant to; it's simply a graphical representation, which, in the Beginner's Photography courses that I have taught, the majority of my students have found very useful. Your mileage may vary....My point is that the exposure triangle doesn't teach anything, and it most certainly does not teach how the three factors interact...
Just as a for instance, suppose we forget ISO for the moment.
Imagine a graphic of a teeter-totter, a see-saw, or a balance scale. Label one side "shutter speed" and the other "aperture", and then write underneath it "keep the scale balanced to keep the exposure the same". Now we see clearly and unambiguously (assuming we have proper labels) that if we make the shutter speed faster, we must make the aperture wider, and vice versa. It's an actual geometrical model of what's going on. The Exposure Triangle seems to be an attempt to extend the balance scale picture to include ISO, and it's failed completely.
Or at any rate, I have not seen a single explanation that managed to get any further than "here's the exposure triangle. These three settings are interconnected. Let's look at some examples!"