You all seem to be missing something here.
I DO UNDERSTAND that it is overexposed. and WHY it's overexposed. Trust me. I Understand all of that.
As I stated in one of the posts, I was on the lowest possible ISO, Highest possible Fstop, with 3 stacked ND Filters, and my picture was completely white. Why? Because I had a long shutter speed. Yes. I KNOW.
If I wanted it to be exposed properly, I would use a faster shutter speed.
But as I stated, I WANTED to use a slower speed, to smoothen out the water in the picture. And am simply curious as to what I have to do in order to get such pictures. I'm assuming a camera a Fstop of 16, plus the ND filters would allow me a longer exposure time.
So as of now, the only possible way I'm going to get a 1/3 or greater exposure time, is with a camera that has a higher Fstop?
Believe it or not, I DO understand the exposure triangle. Aperture/ISO/Shutter Speed determines the exposure, and can shoot in manual and adjust each of those to the proper settings to get a properly exposed setting. The higher my aperture is (i.e F22), the wider DOF I will have.
The slower shutter speed, the less amount of light it let's in. The higher the ISO the more light my sensor detects. Meaning to take a picture in a low-light situation, I need a higher ISO. But the higher ISO, the more noise it can add. I even know that the ideal ISO for canons is 100, while it's 200 for Nikons.
All I want to know
is what I have to do
to take a long exposure picture
in broad daylight.
And I'm guessing that since my Aperture only goes to 8, that I won't be able to.
Correct?