Let's have a look at some advanced activities now. What will you do is I want to take you want to take an image using those leavers of a fast moving object in the dark using a higher as a high shutter and a higher aperture. Okay, I'm going to balance those out. Now if you've taken some in the dark, you're going to need to rely on the ISO but you also want to it's moving so you need to freeze it. So now you can lead a high shutter speed but the high shutter speed is going to drag your exposure back down. Now you're gonna need a high aperture probably together.
We want to freeze that motion in the dark is a challenge, but I know you can do it. Now the next one, you want to take an image of moving water in daylight with a low ISO, a low aperture and a low shutter speed. So be moving water with stream water coming from a tap. What want to do is move out slow that water down one take a crash of water using a combination of low ISO low aperture and low shutter speed. That's probably the toughest one of all because sometimes on shots like that, we might even need to use a little filter that goes on the front of the camera. That will actually take the light down.
Have a play, see how close you can get to that shot with your settings and how smooth you can get that water. Now one of the things to make this work is if you're shooting a stream, don't shoot it in full daylight, maybe shoot it a little bit later on. If you want to freeze it and you're struggling and you haven't got what's called a ND filter or neutral density filter Just going to slow, it's going to stop the light coming in a little bit more and slow up and down. And then what we want you to do as well is take a sports shop with a blurred background with a low ISO and high shutter speed and high aperture.