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> 6 minute read

The Exposure Triangle

The fundamental settings of shutter speed, aperture, and ISO form a trio that work in harmony together to control the brightness of a photograph and much more.

The brightness of the pictures you shoot with your X Series camera is controlled by just three camera settings: shutter speed, aperture, and ISO. Even when you shoot in an auto mode, it’s still these three factors that are being balanced behind the scenes by your camera’s electronics. Getting the right combination of shutter speed, aperture, and ISO is critical to shooting pictures that are not too dark and not too bright, but each also has valuable secondary effects that can unlock the door to creative photography.

Let’s have a closer look at each of these settings:

  • Shutter speed is the length of time the camera opens its shutter and lets light enter (a bit like your eyelid). The longer the shutter speed, the more light that enters, and the brighter the image will be.
  • Aperture is the size of the opening in the lens through which light enters the camera (a bit like your eye’s iris). The larger the aperture, the more light that enters and the brighter the image will be.
  • ISO is the sensitivity of the sensor towards light. It’s like the recording level on a microphone: turning it up means the sensor reacts more towards light, and the image will be brighter.

© Victoria Wright

Shutter speed, aperture, and ISO are related, and we can trade one off against another. For instance, we can create identical photos of the same brightness by:

  • Letting in a small amount of light (through a narrow aperture) for a long time (shutter speed) (eg 1/4sec at F16 and ISO 100).
  • Letting in a lot of light (through a wide aperture) for a short amount of time (shutter speed) (eg 1/125sec at F2.8 and ISO 100.
  • Letting in a small amount of light (through a narrow aperture) for a short amount of time (shutter speed), but with the ISO increased (eg 1/125sec at F16 and ISO 3200).

In fact, there are lots of combinations of shutter speed, aperture, and ISO that will create the correct brightness in a picture. This begs the question: does it matter which combination you use? Well, yes it does, because different apertures and shutter speeds can affect how an image looks in other ways, apart from brightness. We’ll come on to look at these in a moment. But first, let’s have a look at how to get away from auto mode and take control of these fundamentals.

Changing Your Shooting Mode

The easiest way to take control of shutter speed is to use Shutter Priority mode. This lets you set a shutter speed manually and have the camera pick a corresponding aperture to match. Likewise, Aperture Priority mode lets you pick an aperture manually and have the camera set the corresponding shutter speed automatically.

How to access these two modes depends on which X Series camera you have.

For X Series cameras with a mode dial. Set the mode dial to S for Shutter Priority or A for Aperture Priority. You’ll now be able to adjust the shutter speed or aperture using the camera’s rear control dial.

For X Series cameras without a mode dial.
Engage Shutter Priority mode by setting the lens’s aperture ring to A and the shutter speed to any numerical value. Activate Aperture Priority mode by setting A on the shutter speed dial and any numerical value on the aperture ring.

In Shutter Priority mode, you’ll be able to adjust shutter speed independently, with the camera picking an aperture to match. Notice how values shorter than one second are represented by whole numbers (ie 250 for 1/250 of a second) while speeds longer than a second have a symbol after them (ie 4” for four seconds).

Every time the shutter speed halves, half the amount of light is let in – a difference that we call a stop. As you scroll through the shutter speeds, you’ll notice there are smaller third-of-a-stop intervals that let us fine-tune the shutter speed more precisely. (To access these on an X Series camera with a shutter speed dial, you’ll need to use the rear control dial.)

Apertures are labelled somewhat differently: large sizes have small numbers, while small sizes have large numbers. It’s confusing when you start out, but don’t worry – you will get used to it! Like shutter speeds, apertures can be changed in stops (and thirds of a stop), with each stop representing a halving or doubling of the amount of light entering the camera.

In fact, as you change the aperture value, you should notice the shutter speed changing by the same number of stops in response.

ISO Sensitivity

We haven’t talked about ISO much yet, but the principle is much the same. Starting at ISO 200 (the lowest ISO value on many, but not all, of our cameras), the sensitivity doubles every time the ISO value doubles – an increase of one stop.

The stop system is what links shutter speed, aperture, and ISO together. Change one of them and another has to change in response to keep the brightness the same. Or to put it another way, changing any of these three settings by one stop will have the same effect on brightness.

This three-way relationship is often represented by the exposure triangle, which is a useful diagram to remember when trying to recall how these fundamentals of photography work together.

Why Use Different Aperture and Shutter Speeds?

So, if different combinations of shutter speed, aperture, and ISO give identical brightnesses, why bother worrying about which ones we use? Good question! It’s because of the other things that shutter speed and aperture do to a picture.

Shutter speeds control how moving objects are captured on camera, and apertures affect how far behind and in front of the point of focus looks sharp – something photographers call depth-of-field. We’ll look more at these relationships in future tutorials in this series.

Your Next Steps

  • CHALLENGE Switch into Aperture Priority or Shutter Priority mode and shoot pictures of the same scene using different combinations of aperture and shutter speeds. What do you notice about the pictures? Hopefully they’re all the same brightness, but are there any other differences? We’ll come on to explore these in a few weeks. Post your results to social media with the hashtag #learnwithfujifilm. You can also submit your work here for a chance to be featured on our social media channels
  • WATCH Check out our video below to learn more about the exposure triangle

Also Try...

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Three Ways to Improve Exposure on Moving Subjects

Discover some FUJIFILM X Series camera tricks to help you create great sports and action images

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