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6 answers

The best solution is to use the slowest film speed with the fastest shutter speed. This way their is a requirement for an abundance of light while still only letting the most minimum amount of light in.

2006-06-06 05:39:01 · answer #1 · answered by Ipshwitz 5 · 0 0

Use slower ISO film, like 50 or 25, then use a ND filter (Neutral Density) perhaps 4X.
If you put your filter (4X in our example), then divide the ISO by 4.

ISO/4

You will end up with an working ISO of 6.25; get your meter to this ISO and measure the light;
You will end with a wide aperture (2.8 or so) and speed of 1/30th of a second

2006-06-06 12:54:07 · answer #2 · answered by bigonegrande 6 · 0 0

If you are shooting in bright light you can set your shutter speed on something like 1/1000. This is a fast speed and will allow you to open up your fstop to something wider like F 5.6 or F4. If you can set your camera to a faster shutter speed like 1/2000 thats even better. You can also different Film speeds. If you use something slow like ISO 100 you can shoot in very bright light and you will get lots of detail as opposed to shooting at 800 ISO which causes more graininess. Hope this helps.

2006-06-06 11:24:13 · answer #3 · answered by this_girl_is_lost 3 · 0 0

If your film is slow 25 -100 asa and you want only the foreground to be in focus - you can fool your camera by first getting a reading in regular light then manually setting it to a bigger aperture

2006-06-06 08:01:20 · answer #4 · answered by prettymama 5 · 0 0

Use the absolute highest shutter speed. You could also use a neutral density filter to cut down on some of the light coming into the lens. They are inexpensive and come in a variety of densities.

2006-06-06 09:53:30 · answer #5 · answered by Joe D 3 · 0 0

High shutter speed and low ISO rating.

2006-06-06 19:20:27 · answer #6 · answered by no1nhere 1 · 0 0

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