jann1033 said:
i was just reading another thread and noticed a blurry picture i had shot was at 80mm at f5.6...it was an interior shot..i tried ( as per someone's suggestion ) today to see if the f stop would go to 3.5 like it's supposed to at 80mm and it did( outside bright sunlight) but i can never get it to do that ( like when i took that picture, it should have moved past 5.6 since it was at the full zoom of 80 but literally the first time i have ever seen it at 3.5 was today) .it won't go larger than 5.6, it's not that it goes there but blinks, the dial literally won't bring it up, stays on 5.6,..so what would cause that..the camera or the lens? i've tried it on av, tv, manual and program...the lens is a rechipped sigma 28-80mm f 3.5-5.6
is something up with the camera or the lens?
The reason the image was blurry is probably because of one of two things. The photographer doesn't have steady hands (or needed a tripod) or the subject moved a little during the exposure because the shutter was too slow to stop the motion. The cure for that is more light, a steadier hand or support or a stationary subject.
The aperture is in the lens but controlled by the camera. It's an adjustable hole that lets more or less light into the camera's sensor depending whether it's closed down (higher F stops and greater depth of field) or opened up (lower F stops and shallower (or shorter) depth of field).
Most all consumer grade zoom lens like your 28-80 have what they call a variable aperture. This means that when the lens is set to 28 it has a wider (more open hole and lower F stop) aperture. And when it's at 80, it the opposite. In between those zoom settings the aperture is most likely something between F3.5 and F5.6.
You camera may have several auto modes like full automatic where the camera sets both the shutter and aperture based on the light in scene your shooting.
In shutter priority, you set the shutter and the camera will automatically set the aperture to get the correct exposure. If possible. If you set a shutter that's too slow or too fast, the lens may not have an aperture setting that will produce a correct exposure.
The aperture priority mode is just like the shutter priority mode but just the opposite. You set the aperture, the camera sets the shutter (again, if possible) to get the correct exposure.
TV mode is meant for taking pictures of a TV screen. It sets the shutter to 1/60 sec to avoid capturing the black bars (you can't see them) that TVs use to make a TV work.
Manual is just that. You set both shutter and aperture to get the correct exposure (using your camera's meter or an external light meter).