@doxxy Whee!
Longer exposure and lower ISO actually works great for reducing /noise/, but increases /blur/.
@IceWolf Blur = speed must be fast photos!
@doxxy Ehhh depends on how steady your paws are! >,,>
@doxxy If you have long enough exposures, camera shake starts to become a problem.
@doxxy oh!! or d'you mean 'it's blurry so it must be a fast photo'? Oops!
@IceWolf I tried manual settings and made a fully black image! :D
@doxxy Hah! :3
(if you don't know how the different settings interact, we can help with that!)
@IceWolf I've only got basic clues right now. I'm trying to identify which thingy and how to change it right now.
I found ISO, Shutter Speed, and fstops (can't remember what fstops do)
@doxxy fstops is aperture! i.e. how wide open the light hole is.
– ISO is the amplification of the sensor: turn it up, get brighter but noisier images.
– Shutter speed is, well, shutter speed. If it's faster (1/higher numbers), you get a dimmer picture, but less blur, and vice versa.
– (The photo is effectively an /overlay/ of a bunch of instantaneous captures, so moving the camera while it's taking a photo blurs the picture. Really long exposures get you things like star trails, but you better grab a tripod for that.)
– Aperture: wider aperture – LOWER f-stop numbers, for some reason – gets you more light, and also more depth-of-field background/foreground blur!
@IceWolf Ooo. So low number for aperature is better for low light maybe? I kind of played with the settings a bit in my not so well-lit room so am gonna see how this photo turned out.
@IceWolf ... ... ... Well. It's yellow! XD
@IceWolf So I did a series with different shutter speeds and got a nice one that isn't yellow! Now to see if I'm happy with the grains in RawTherapy. x3
@IceWolf Whuh! Messing with white balance and the yellow is gone!
@doxxy Figured! Bet the camera's auto-white-balance just got confused. :3
@doxxy The camera's white balance setting doesn't affect the RAW data at ALL.
@IceWolf Maybe! I got no clue. x3
@doxxy Nice! =^.^=