S'abonner

Connection

What is film speed, and which ISO should I use when shooting?

What is film speed, and which ISO should I use when shooting?

If you’re used to the digital world, film speed may not be a term you’re immediately familiar with. However, you may have heard of “ISO,” since it’s made the leap to modern digital cameras. The simple equation: ISO is film speed. 200, 400, even 800 — those numbers listed on your film’s packaging is the ISO and it tells you how sensitive your film is to light.  ISO is the International Organization for Standardization which oversees, develops and publishes technical, industrial and commercial standards worldwide. Historically, various metrics were used to determine film sensitivity around the world - the most common were DIN (Deutsches Institut für Normung) in Europe and ASA (American Standards Association) in the United States. In 1974, ASA and DIN were combined to provide the current ISO system; typically, this is listed on the packaging as ASA/DIN.
If you’re used to the digital world, film speed may not be a term you’re immediately familiar with. However, you may have heard of “ISO,”

Film speed - Wikipedia

Film Speed Explained: Demystifying ISO

What is film speed, and which ISO should I use when shooting?

Film Speed Explained: Demystifying ISO

ISO, Aperture & Shutter Speed

Filmmaking Basics 101: ISO, Aperture, Shutter Speed Explained - Moment

Understanding Shutter Speed for Beginners + CHART

What Is Exposure and How to Measure It

Aperture, Shutter Speed, ISO

Beginner Guide - Basic understanding of ISO, Shutter Speed and Aperture - Tahusa

Lesson 5] What is ISO Speed?

Photography Basics 101: Aperture, Shutter speed, and ISO - Improve Photography

What is ISO in Photography? (Why ISO Matters and 5 Examples)

What is the Sunny 16 Rule and How to Use it? - The Expert Guide