Hello, it's Karen from the photography playground. Welcome back to this lecture about to semi automatic modes. Open up your menu and choose the ISO shutter speed priority mode. Let's first have a look at the ISO priority mode. Clicking on the ISO icon activates the ISO priority mode, you set the ISO value and the camera will calculate the required shutter speed to expose properly. When you change the ISO setting, the shutter speed will be adjusted accordingly.
Now try it out for yourself. Navigate through the different ISO settings and see how the shutter speed is adjusting. Also keep an eye on the histogram. And as of 2000 is the highest the app can go you can see that by the red number. I think it's also a way to tell you that you should try to avoid to go this high because it will seriously affect the quality of the file. Let's see if the shutter speed priority mode works in the same way.
Click on the shutter speed icon to activate the shutter speed priority mode. You set the shutter speed and the camera will calculate what ISO value it thinks it needs for proper exposure. Again, try it out for yourself and see how the eyes Oh value is increasing or decreasing depending on which way you turn the wheel. Navigate through all the different shutter speeds. The slowest shutter speed is one third of a second, the apple show you a red icon on the left of the screen to indicate that you should use some kind of support for your phone like a tripod. And of course you can compensate for exposure in semi automatic mode.
First click the exposure compensation icon. The camera will automatically set the shutter speed and ISO but don't worry, you can adjust it later. First you need to establish the amount of compensation for overexposure. You slide the wheels into the class values, then you click the shutter speed icon. You can also work in ISO priority mode and set the shutter speed, the ISO will again adjust automatically. Try it out for yourself to get familiar with this kind of exposure setting.
When you set the exposure compensation, look at the histogram and avoid going into the red. Red on the right side of the histogram indicates too much overexposure. And of course we can also under expose slide two we went to the minus values. Then select the ISO priority mode. You can also work with shutter speed priority mode, set your desired ISO value and the camera picks the shutter speed. Try it out for yourself again and see the shutter speed adjusting.
Keep an eye on the histogram to avoid too much under exposure. A red line on the left side indicates the image will be too dark. See you in the next lecture. And in the meantime, happy photo graphing