• Members 2288 posts
    April 9, 2023, 9:12 a.m.

    i dont know of any camera user manual saying any different ,its been around for decades. If you know of any camera manual that says exposure is just shutter speed and aperture i be interested.

    quote from the latest sony manual

    "In the auto shooting modes and P/A/S-modes, the automatic exposure (AE) function is activated. As a result, the camera will determine the optimal exposure and set the aperture, shutter speed, and ISO sensitivity accordingly. By using this AE function, you can shoot photographs with appropriate brightness, automatically determined by the camera."

  • Members 280 posts
    April 9, 2023, 9:15 a.m.

    Tonality ?

    There are also the expressions "High key" and "Low key". (But not "medium key".)
    Don

  • April 9, 2023, 9:27 a.m.

    Which makes it worse. I was around early enough to see how this all arose. It's a combination of two small errors put together to make a big one. Digital still cameras evolved from video cameras, so the first people to explain how they worked were video engineers. In the video world the 'gain' control was what was used to make a picture brighter or darker - the voltage gain on the signal applied to the grid of the cathode ray tube directly controlled the brightness of the display (which approximated to lightness). So video engineers explained the ISO control as 'gain' - which it wasn't. But 'gain' wasn't a word familiar to stills photographers, so 'gain' got translated to 'sensitivity' - which it wasn't. And plagiarism did the rest. An easy way to spot plagiarism is propagation of errors.

    If they said that they'd be wrong. Exposure is just shutter speed, aperture, focal length and scene luminance. You can simplify by replacing aperture with f-number.

  • Members 221 posts
    April 9, 2023, 10:12 a.m.

    You're exactly right. On more than one occasion, I've reminded colleagues who were getting excessively worked up about a problem, that we're not dealing with life or death issues and that this too shall pass โ€” whatever this too of the moment happened to be. So far we've had grave, dangerous, and toxic applied to the discussion, but I haven't seen much to actually fear.

  • Members 221 posts
    April 9, 2023, 10:47 a.m.

    You won't find dither, ADC inputs, or any number of other things mentioned. They're ignored because they are beyond the scope of the article and its intended purpose and audience.

    Sounds like he knew his audience and the broad concepts he was trying to introduce to them and doing so in a way they could initially start to grasp.

  • Members 2288 posts
    April 9, 2023, 11:08 a.m.

    so all camera companies are wrong ? whats correct beef burger or ham burger ? fish and chips or fish an french fries [๐Ÿ˜‰๐Ÿ˜ accelerator cable or throttle cable . brake line or brake tube [๐Ÿ˜œ

  • Members 3347 posts
    April 9, 2023, 11:21 a.m.

    If they say ISO is a component of exposure* then yes, they are wrong. The effect of ISO is applied after the shutter has closed and no more light can reach the sensor. So ISO cannot be a component of exposure*

    For example:

    For a given scene and lighting -

    A. f/8, 1/400s, ISO 200

    and

    B. f/8, 1/200s, ISO 100

    will both output the same image lightness but the ISO 200 shot will have had only half the exposure* of the ISO 100 shot and so will have more visible noise in the shadows because of the lower SNR resulting from the smaller exposure*

    Exposure* and image lightness, although related, are two different things and not 2 different names for the one thing.

    It's when people use exposure* and image lightness interchangeably as if they meant the same thing that they often get themselves in a twist, especially when I tell them I can change the image lightness in camera while keeping a constant exposure*

    What is the definition of the word 'exposure' you use when you use it in sentences?

    * exposure - amount of light striking the sensor per unit area while the shutter is open
    ** optimal exposure - the maximum exposure* within dof and motion blur requirements without clipping important highlights.
    *** under exposed - more exposure* could have been added with the DOF and blur constraints still being met without clipping important highlights.

  • Members 118 posts
    April 9, 2023, 12:17 p.m.

    In perhaps a vain mediation attempt :) : Can we agree that shutter-speed and aperture affect the number of photons hitting the sensor, but ISO does not?
    Cheers!
    Jerry

  • Members 118 posts
    April 9, 2023, 12:40 p.m.

    Artfully conceived and expressed. I'm gonna tuck this one away under the cranial cap.

  • April 9, 2023, 12:48 p.m.

    It depends which part of each camera company you want to look at. The people who write the manuals seem to be wrong, If you delve into technical papers produced by the company's engineers, they seem to know what they're talking about.
    The people that write manuals are rarely engineers, they are technical authors.

  • April 9, 2023, 12:49 p.m.

    It's not about 'scope'. It's about writing things that are downright false.

  • April 9, 2023, 12:51 p.m.

    The fact that the negative consequences are less than fatal doesn't mean that there are no negative consequences. What has happened is that a generation of photographers have grown up with a faulty mental model of how photography works, which in general hinders the process of photography.

  • Members 976 posts
    April 9, 2023, 1:27 p.m.

    You admit that you don't see statements like
    "A photograph's exposure determines how light or dark an image will appear when it's been captured by your camera. "
    "ISO speed: controls the sensitivity of your camera's sensor to a given amount of light"
    "higher ISO speeds dramatically increase image noise"
    as fundamentally wrong.
    Ironically, the topic here is "Exposure is not how dark or how light an image looks!"

  • Members 976 posts
    April 9, 2023, 1:41 p.m.

    We can, if we realize what happens when we set ISO and let the camera choose exposure parameters (shutter speed and aperture) based on metering and ISO setting ;)

  • Members 1737 posts
    April 9, 2023, 2:29 p.m.

    The concept he was introducing was not germane in the world we live in. Maybe in an alternate universe where cameras had FWCs of 200000e- and 8 bit ADCs, it would be germane. But it's a red herring.

    And completely unnecessary. You can motivate users to move in the direction of ETTR at base ISO simply by explaining how photon noise works. That has the advantage of truth: it is the dominant noise contributor for most photos at base ISO. And it has the additional advantage that, unlike ADC precision, it is a consequence of physics and won't be affected by advances in the CMOS technology that keeps the same broad architecture.

    The "half the counts are in the top stop of the image histogram" argument should be consigned to outer darkness, as far as beginners are concerned. It's possible to put some cameras into some modes where, at some ISOs, there is inadequate dither, but that's not the common use case.

  • Members 1737 posts
    April 9, 2023, 3:08 p.m.

    By the way, I once had a Hasselblad H2D-39 that carried dither to a ridiculous extreme. It had a CCD sensor with off-sensor 16-bit ADCs. The 5 LSBs were pure noise.

  • Members 118 posts
    April 9, 2023, 6:29 p.m.

    I think we can agree, yes. In physical terms, changing ISOโ€™s will vary the #photons hitting the sensor, FOR a given shutter-speed & aperture (assuming, as you said, that the camera is choosing 1 or both of shutter & aperture).

    Iโ€™m sure youโ€™d express it in more technical terms (commensurate with your deep domain expertise). But, partly, Iโ€™m trying for language that could be easily understood by a โ€œbeginnerโ€ (as is the concern some here have expressed), while still being fully accurate (as is the concern others have expressed).

    Still agreed?
    Cheers!
    Jerry

  • Members 118 posts
    April 9, 2023, 6:37 p.m.

    Sorry, strike the โ€œassuming phraseโ€. The #photons hitting the the sensor will vary with ISO at a fixed shutter-aperture combination.