TheGoofster
Old Foggie
- Joined
- Sep 18, 2006
- Messages
- 5,451
Right now I'm in the process of trying to relearn a lot of what I used to know about photography, especially about the differences between a SLR and a DSLR.
The question I have right now is about shutter speed. I remember when I used to shoot with my SLR that the general rule of thumb was that 1/60 of a second was about as low as you wanted to comfortably go when holding a camera. If you were really steady you could probably get away with 1/30 of a second, but that was pushing it.
While looking through some shots taken on DSLR's and the exif information, I've seen some nice shots that people say were taken by hand, with shutter speeds as low as 1/10 of a second.
So how does shutter speed compare to SLR's and DSLR's? Is there a general rule about how low you can go with a shutter speed, and still get a nice hand-held shot?
I don't have my DSLR camera yet (hopefully in about a month I will, but I am trying to get a jump about learning about it), so I can' actually test it myself yet.
Again, thanks for any information.
The question I have right now is about shutter speed. I remember when I used to shoot with my SLR that the general rule of thumb was that 1/60 of a second was about as low as you wanted to comfortably go when holding a camera. If you were really steady you could probably get away with 1/30 of a second, but that was pushing it.
While looking through some shots taken on DSLR's and the exif information, I've seen some nice shots that people say were taken by hand, with shutter speeds as low as 1/10 of a second.
So how does shutter speed compare to SLR's and DSLR's? Is there a general rule about how low you can go with a shutter speed, and still get a nice hand-held shot?
I don't have my DSLR camera yet (hopefully in about a month I will, but I am trying to get a jump about learning about it), so I can' actually test it myself yet.
Again, thanks for any information.


Don't mess with a woman with a gun. 
