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Shutter speed is the reciprocal of exposure time. So "took a shot at 1/30 sec" is one way of saying that the exposure time was 1/30 s.Say you took a shot at 1/30 sec and someone for whatever reason says that they would "double the shutter speed" and try again.
What do you think they mean?
Nobody is right or wrong, this is ambiguous.Say you took a shot at 1/30 sec and someone for whatever reason says that they would "double the shutter speed" and try again.
What do you think they mean?
Well I am french and the terminology : "vitesse d'obturation" is also very widely used.I wonder if this is just a language issue that is more confusing for non-native English speakers.
ChatGPT:
While "shutter speed" is the standard term in English, other languages often use terms that translate to "shutter time," emphasizing the exposure duration. Here are some examples:
These terms all focus on the concept of exposure time, highlighting the interval during which light is allowed to reach the camera's sensor or film.
- French: Temps d'exposition
- German: Belichtungszeit
- Spanish: Tiempo de exposición
- Italian: Tempo di esposizione
- Portuguese: Tempo de exposição
- Dutch: Belichtingstijd
- Russian: Время экспозиции (Vremya ekspozitsii)
- Japanese: 露光時間 (Rokō jikan)
- Chinese (Simplified): 曝光时间 (Bàoguāng shíjiān)
- Arabic: زمن التعريض (Zaman at-ta`rīḍ)
I would think that all languages have different words for time and speed, after all they are quite different physical concepts.Well I am french and the terminology : "vitesse d'obturation" is also very widely used.I wonder if this is just a language issue that is more confusing for non-native English speakers.
ChatGPT:
While "shutter speed" is the standard term in English, other languages often use terms that translate to "shutter time," emphasizing the exposure duration. Here are some examples:
These terms all focus on the concept of exposure time, highlighting the interval during which light is allowed to reach the camera's sensor or film.
- French: Temps d'exposition
- German: Belichtungszeit
- Spanish: Tiempo de exposición
- Italian: Tempo di esposizione
- Portuguese: Tempo de exposição
- Dutch: Belichtingstijd
- Russian: Время экспозиции (Vremya ekspozitsii)
- Japanese: 露光時間 (Rokō jikan)
- Chinese (Simplified): 曝光时间 (Bàoguāng shíjiān)
- Arabic: زمن التعريض (Zaman at-ta`rīḍ)
Maybe not as much as "temps d'exposition", not sure about that, but both are used for sure.
I know what I mean by increasing shutter speed, but I have no idea what others mean by it.Say you took a shot at 1/30 sec and someone for whatever reason says that they would "double the shutter speed" and try again.
What do you think they mean?
Quite the opposite. I think 1/60 is the only technically correct answer here. "Double speed" means "go faster". Surprisingly about 20% of respondents either find this ambiguous themselves or believe other people might find it ambiguous when talking about shutter speed.While 1/60 is technically wrong
I think this is again a terminology debate. And terminology is arbitrary.Quite the opposite. I think 1/60 is the only technically correct answer here. "Double speed" means "go faster". Surprisingly about 20% of respondents either find this ambiguous themselves or believe other people might find it ambiguous when talking about shutter speed.While 1/60 is technically wrong
I suppose the best way to ensure certainty is to explicitly specify the new shutter speed, e.g. "try a higher shutter speed such as 1/60 sec".
I think it's not entirely clear and some have trouble with fractions. The context, what's going on with the photo would help. Is it seeing some camera motion? Or trying to get smoother water flow or intended subject motion blurring?Say you took a shot at 1/30 sec and someone for whatever reason says that they would "double the shutter speed" and try again.
What do you think they mean?
Dark picture of static subject? 1/15, though I hope you're on either a tripod or a wide lens with good IBIS.Say you took a shot at 1/30 sec and someone for whatever reason says that they would "double the shutter speed" and try again.
What do you think they mean?