Hi Orion
so kind of you posing as giving advice to the new fellas like me
Criticism is a good thing when its constructive, but what makes you laugh keep it to yourself
the txt in you message you highlighted in bold, yes i pointed at the light and tried to take some pics yes to see if the cam is working at all
and yes im a newbie and i thought this thread is for guys like me, if you see my other lines which you missed to see
i know nothing of DSLRs and this is my first one
so is this a problem or is there any setting i should try
try to help if you want to, dont just pose (cheese). Its just a start, Dont worry Orion ill be there soon enough.
I honestly wasn't laughing at you, I was telling Tyler that he'll laugh at
himself once he learns a little more. I'm not laughing at him either.
I'm not on this forum to make enemies, and I answered your question by telling you to read your manual and do some research on exposure. Why would I say that instead of just answering your question myself? Because as MissCream indicated in her first reply, that's a long answer that involves understanding how exposure works, and people have written
books to explain how exposure works.
In short though, there are three things that influence exposure (exposure = how much light is captured for a single photograph): ISO, Aperture, and Shutter Speed. All three of these settings need to be "correct" in order to get a "correct" exposure.
ISO: Higher numbers means more exposure (brighter photos). It will also increase noise, or graininess.
Aperture: Higher numbers means LESS exposure (darker photos). It will also increase your depth-of-field.
Shutter Speed: Higher numbers mean LESS exposure (darker photos). It will also freeze fast action.
So if you're in manual mode and your photos are dark, choose higher numbers for your ISO, lower numbers for your aperture, lower numbers for your shutter speed, or some combination of the three.
Now the problem with giving that advice is it doesn't tell you
anything about when to change which setting, or about what's really going on when you change them. That information is available in a thousand places online, even on YouTube, and I really recommend you check out some of those sources first, and if you have questions about them, I'll be happy to answer them.