How Digital Photography Works

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Exposure equivalences are the basis of a common feature among digital—and film—cameras: exposure modes. The photographer
chooses among modes using a knob located conveniently near the shutter button. Typically the modes include


  • Automatic Exposure—The processor works unassisted except for the light meter readings and information from the lens that
    suggest a shot might be a landscape or one that requires a fast shutter to defeat shaky hands. The chip’s software decides on both
    the shutter speed and aperture, usually choosing a combination that works perfectly fine for the average shot.

  • Programmed Exposure—Similar to automatic mode, except that the photographer can change the shutter or aperture on-the-
    fly and that the processor responds by adjusting the aperture or shutter, respectively, to maintain the same exposure equivalence.

  • Shutter Priority or Time Value—The photographer chooses the shutter speed, and the processor picks a complementary
    aperture setting. Shutter priority is useful when it’s important, for example, to have a fast shutter to freeze an action shot.

  • Aperture Priority or Aperture Value—Just the reverse of shutter priority. The photographer chooses the aperture, and the
    processor picks the shutter speed. It’s useful for a portrait when the photographer wants to maintain a large aperture so the back-
    ground is blurred and unobtrusive.

    • Manual—For those times when the photographer has a better understanding of the lighting than the light
      meter does.




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The photographer’s choice of exposure mode influences which exposure
setting, from among several EVs, the processor picks. The chart here
shows a multiprogram autoexposure system that allows the photographer
to select fully automatic, high-speed, or maximum depth-of-field without
having to pick any specific shutter or aperture setting. The exposure sys-
tem sticks to one of a few specific paths that run through the range of
aperture and shutter settings. The setting in each of the paths meets the
requirements of the photographer’s selection.

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For the average photograph, for which the photographer has not cho-
sen any special priority, the exposure system chooses a setting among
the EVs shown here in yellow. For depth-of-field priority, the camera’s
processor chooses among the blue EVs. For action shots, the choices
are concentrated along the high–shutter speed EVs, marked in green.

CHAPTER 5 HOW DIGITAL EXPOSURE SIFTS, MEASURES, AND SLICES LIGHT 75

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