Hi guys,
you two are definitely right on the information you give. May I just throw in the experience I have with many people new to DSLR, or photography in general. People that do not know anything about aperture, shutter speed and iso usually are overwhelmed by too much in depth knowledge. I am a techy myself and love all the scientific background. But I have seen beginners that even gave up due to everything being way too complicated, while in fact it is not complicated at all, if you start out the easy way.
For most people that is all information they may ever need, because the percentage of people that go professional is pretty small, and those can learn the science part of it later in their career.
Hand held light meters are awesome, but people who hesitate to buy a 50mm 1.8 for $125 will hardly be interested in the cheapest Sekonic for $126, especially since that would totally swamp them, if they don´t even know hot to set manual exposure, or even use aperture priority.
I´m pretty new here in the forum, and you two are honourable long term members. While I don´t really feel entitled to raise my concern, I still think I need to humbly throw that into the discussion. What do you think?
I think it's a legitimate question/point and a tricky problem. Basically it boils down to where to draw the line between giving a beginner useful info and encouragement and not giving them too much or any false info because it's too complicated to explain how it really works. A simpler photo example: We can count on the fact that some budding enthusiast will be along here soon enough wanting to know why they saw someone using a 35mm lens on an m4/3 camera to shoot a portrait when they had learned that a 35mm lens distorts too much to use for portraits. Originally they were probably given the easy explanation and wound up linking focal length and perspective such that they now believe perspective (and distortion) is a function of the focal length/lens and goes wherever the lens goes. Now they're confused and have to re-learn. In the meantime they've spread the fallacy to a dozen of their friends who proceeded to do the same. (So I already know I'm not going to win this one).
Even Nikon in their camera manuals describes ISO as determining the sensitivity of the camera and that raising ISO increases sensitivity. (I'm really not going to win this one). But of course that's not true. It's also not true that raising the ISO value on a digital camera makes the photo noisy or noisier. In fact it does the opposite and typically reduces the noise that is caused by underexposure. Neither is ISO a direct determinant of exposure. A correct definition of photographic exposure does not include ISO. So when we "exposure triangle" a bunch of new photographers we plant misleading ideas in their heads.
In argument for: the exposure triangle model is pretty simple and can get them up and functioning quickly with a minimum of pain. But shouldn't we at least assume and respect their intelligence and tell them, "look this model will help you quick start, but it's actually a bad fit to what's really going on." Bet you most of them would immediately ask you to tell them what's really going on.
A story: I'm a retired college prof who still does some part-time teaching. Right now I have a student in my class who is younger than me and also teaching photography. She was encouraged to sit-in my class because I was recommended as a source to help understand color management. A couple weeks ago when ISO came up in class I took the time to explain it. I noticed a look of astonishment on her face (she shoots Nikon -- note comment above). Then she says to me, "so changing ISO on a digital camera isn't the same as changing film. It's really more like pushing film isn't it?" And I said, "Exactly right. You can't change the sensitivity of the sensor but you can 'underexpose it and then overdevelop.' And what always happened to the shadow detail when you pushed film?" And she excitedly says, "OMG! it all finally makes sense. Why didn't they just tell me in the first place?" Now what was the point of keeping her in a fog? She's passing this nonsense on to her students and you can't blame her it's right there in her Nikon camera manual and probably in the textbook she uses.
There's a problem if the explanation you provide for something doesn't make logical sense when you try and think about it carefully. People end up confused. If they are interested in learning more their further learning is retard by the fog they've been placed in and the misdirection they been given. Most photographers out there in fact believe they can increase the light sensitivity of digital cameras by raising the ISO value. Should we really continue to perpetuate that and so many other fallacies?
Joe
P.S. I watched your youtube videos and applaud you for resisting the standard "ISO increases sensitivity" rubbish. Your megaphone and amplifier sliders did a good job of getting across how it really works and you used the term "increase brightness" which is a whole lot more accurate than saying exposure.
ISO in a digital camera really is a post processing step that occurs after exposure. Your videos are much better than the average fare in that regard, so you're smart enough to make an adjustment that also gives them an accurate understanding of exposure: luminance + shutter speed + aperture.
First of all - thanks for checking my videos and giving me your highly valued feedback (and I mean it like that

).
In regard to your suggestion of using Luminance + Shutter Speed + Aperture: I am totally with you and I plan adding luminance in a later movie. For these intros to photography, I still think it is better to keep the three most prominent, to get people started, because these are values, that people can "change" in camera. Getting people started in my opinion is the most important part, because that keeps their interest. Some people are like the student in your class who want to know all the details. I guess the relative amount of people interested in the science part of photography that visit your class in relation to the average guy or girl with a DSLR interested in photography science is much, much higher. For these average people, it is important to have quick success to keep them motivated. Some will be happy with that, but others won´t and they keep reading/watching youtube, etc.. In my videos I try to satisfy both - starting as easy as possible, without telling them anything wrong.
There's the problem: You are telling them something wrong. And I'm not advocating that we shouldn't make it simple and short and fun and accessible. I'm just suggesting it would be best if we can avoid telling them anything wrong.
From Ilford's
The Manual of Photography (page 231):
"
Exposure
When a photograph is taken, light from the various areas of the subject falls on corresponding areas of the film for a set time. The effect produced on the emulsion is, within limits, proportional to the product of the illuminance E and the exposure time t. We express this by the equation H = Et"
From webopedia
What is exposure? Webopedia Definition :
"
exposure
By Vangie Beal In digital photography, exposure is the unit of measurement for the total amount of light permitted to reach the electronic sensor during the process of taking a photograph. The two main controls your digital camera uses to control exposure are the shutter speed and aperture."
From Wikipedia
Exposure (photography) - Wikipedia :
"In
photography,
exposure is the amount of light per unit area (the image plane
illuminance times the exposure time) reaching a
photographic film or electronic
image sensor, as determined by shutter speed, lens
aperture and scene
luminance."
OK, so Ilford and web encyclopedias are in basic agreement.
Now I've watched your videos and I'm confused. Can you answer my question please: I set my camera up to photograph a scene with constant illumination. I set the shutter speed to X and the f/stop to Y and I make an exposure. Your videos are telling me that "ISO is the third component that defines the exposure" so now I'm going to change the ISO value on the camera to a higher value and trip the shutter again (same constant illumination, same shutter X and same f/stop Y).
Is that 2nd exposure different than the 1st exposure? (Yes/No). Can you explain how changing the ISO value altered the 2nd exposure so that more or less light reached the sensor -- how does that work?
Yeah I know, when you use the term "exposure" in your videos you don't really mean exposure you mean something else. And you're in good company with Bryan Petersen (Misunderstanding Exposure) and the huge army of Youtube triangulites.
But there is no way in which ISO defines exposure and to say so is to say something wrong. I think it's better if we don't do that.
Joe