if you can link a video of the camera taking the picture and the picture it's self to see how good it is i will make it best answer lol
1/3200, is pretty quick!
Other than that, you're question makes no sense!
The answer to your first question is 15 is fifteen seconds and 1/3200th second is exactly that one thirty-two hundredths of a second. That 15-1/3200 sec means is the range of available shutter speeds on that camera, but what it many not say is you have no control over which of those shutter speeds the camera will choose.
Attempting to link you to a photo taken at 15 seconds and on at 1/3200th second may be doable, but without knowing what brand and model number, we cannot show you want a photo from THAT camera may look link, especially since since if the person who took the shot is a competent photographer, it will look amazing. It the person doesn't have a clue, the shot will look no better than any other "snap shot" (no composition, no control of the lighting and no direction of any model that may be in the shot)
Here is one shot taken at 1/3200th second
[URL Truncated]
Here is one that is a 10 second exposure ... still looking for one at 15 seconds
[URL Truncated]
Here is one shot at 15 seconds
[URL Truncated]
The shot at 1/3200th second could be hand held without introducing any camera movement that would create blur in the image. The long shots, 10 and 15 seconds, of course had to be shot with the camera on a tripod
You already said it, in seconds. That's 15 seconds long for the shutter to stay open. The other is 1 over 3200 of a second, pretty fast. The longer the shutter stays open, the more light enters but more movement can be recorded resulting to blur.
Answer by keerok on 13 Jan 2010 12:14:33
No comments:
Post a Comment