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#199305 - 10/15/07 03:20 AM
Re: Just a couple of photos from football last night...
[Re: Mark S]
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Registered: 06/05/06
Posts: 4349
Loc: Essex, UK
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Ian if you get a mo  Explain ISO for me in English  And in less than 150 words lol I think i understand it? But not 100% I know if its bright and a want a fast action picture frozen in time (eg wheel spinning) i up the ISO But as it gets dark or dull light then ISO comes down to 200 or 100 that's why i said "Did you say 2000" because my jaw dropped lol... Is it the camera or the man behind it  You will need a higher ISO depending upon the ambient light. Darker conditions will require a higher ISO. Unless you are taking a night scene or the moon, when you will probably shoot at 100ISO. You will need a faster shutter speed to stop action. In football you need to shoot at 1/500" or faster (day games typically one will shoot at 1/2000") - 1/500" is probably the slowest speed to stop the action. Now to give you more ambient light you will need to adjust the ISO in dark conditions as already mentioned, but also you need to watch the focal length of the lens. You will need to open the lens as wide as it will go. That is why we have to use large (and expensive!) lenses that will to f2.8. I would like wider than F2.8 (say f2 or f1.4, but these would cost the earth, be massive even if the could made in a longer lens) Of course with a wide open lens you will reduce the background, which is of course what you want often for football or any sport for that matter - you do not want the background getting in the way of a decent picture  Hope that helps 
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