« Home | Lens Contrast (Part 2) » | Better to increase the ISO » | Wildlife Photography » | Lens Contrast (Part 3) » | Lens Contrast (Part 4 : Color Creates Contrast) » | Lens Contrast (Part 5 : MTF Chart) » | Lens Contrast (Part 6 : MTF Chart) » | Lens Contrast (Part 7 : MTF Chart) » | Lens Contrast (Part 8 : MTF Chart) » | Hi! I'm an alien from this spaceship. »

Panning with a slow shutter speed


_DSC4760, originally uploaded by shutterhack.
Taken with a Nikon D50 and AF Zoom-Nikkor 70-300mm f/4-5.6G lens

The shorter the time that the shutter is open the sharper the photo will be.

Panning with a slow shutter speed blurs the background. If you are photographing fast moving objects such as cars or people running you need to select fast shutter speeds to capture the sharpest picture you can. One exception to this is when you are panning the camera with the subject, the object of the exercise here is to render the subject sharply and blur the background, so a careful selection of the right shutter speed to do both is necessary. I often find that a little blur in the right places on a picture gives a greater sense of movement than if everything is pin sharp.

This blur, however, must be in the right places, normally we want to see the head and torso rendered sharply but, if the feet and hands are blurred, it can often be a good thing. Blurring the background can also get you out of trouble when there is a lot of clutter that will detract from the main subject. Getting the shutter speed right to render the correct balance of sharpness and blur on any given subject can really only be determined through trial and error.

One of the great advantages of the digital camera with it's instant playback is that this learning process can be a lot shorter than it was before. If you have a zoom facility on your playback of pictures, now is the time to get familiar with it. I had my digital camera for quite a while before I realised that I could review my pictures and zoom in to check the sharpness.

Not only moving objects suffer from too slow a shutter speed. If you are holding the camera in your hand rather than having it mounted on a tripod, you will see the telltale signs of 'camera shake' (i.e. the movement of the camera) at shutter speeds longer than 1/125th of a second. A secure pair of hands will be able to get away with 1/60th or even 1/30th of a second but the camera would be better mounted on a tripod.

Once again I will say at this point that the difference between a mistake and an effect is usually the degree. A small amount of blur would be considered a mistake, whereas really blurred streaks of light can be an interesting effect. It's all a question of convincing the viewer that you intended to do it.

Labels: , , ,