The Manual Mode Myth by Mike Busby's School of Photography

August 06, 2019  •  2 Comments

This is geared towards new and intermediate photographers and other photographers who've made photography waaaaay to complicated.

Deep Red by mike Busby's School of PhotographyDeep RedDeep Red by Mike Busby's School of Photography


We left early and shot Manito Park a little after 7:00 this morning. I hear advice all the time about shooting on manual and using manual focus for macro. I can't fathom the advice and in my view, it's quite possibly the worst advice I've heard. I bought an expensive camera to work for me, not so that I have to work for it. It's more important for me to be focusing on the moment and not fiddling with the settings. Manual has it's place, but not for general daylight photography and not for beginners. You're doing the same thing as the auto modes, but a thousand times slower, with frequent distractions, and mostly likely getting poorer shots.

 

So, this was shot on aperture mode and auto-focus. F4.5 @ 1/4000th sec, ISO 400. I intentionally had the ISO up, and by extension the shutter speed, because of shooting between the bright light of the sun and in the dark shadows. This was just a nice mix. Set the camera once, check in here and there, and get the cool shots all day long. I can print this image large at ISO 400 with great quality, but I would have missed it had I been fiddling all morning long.

 

A pet peeve are "expert" photographers making photography way more complicated than it has to be. If you're new and following the "Manual Mode" advice, and especially if you are frustrated,  I'd ask you to reconsider and focus on Aperture and Shutter priority mode and set the camera to matrix metering. Take the shot - get the shot. If it's off a touch, then adjust exposure compensation and shoot again. I've worked with a ton of cameras over the last year, and every single one of them nail the exposure on Aperture and Shutter. There are certainly times for manual mode and spot metering. But learn the easy 95% first with intent on composition and I absolutely guarantee you that your photography will dramatically improve no matter your skill level.

 

Mike

Mike Busby Photography

Mike Busbys School of Photography

 

 

 


Comments

Mike Busby's School of Photography
Thanks Lynn!!
Lynn Nordhagen(non-registered)
Great advice! I finally went that way on my own for the last couple of years, and I succeed much more often than when I use manual mode. Who has time for all that fiddling?
No comments posted.
Loading...

Archive
January February March April May June July August September (1) October November December
January February March April May June July August September October November December
January February March April May June July August September October November December
January February March April May June July August (11) September October (2) November (3) December
January February March April May June July August September October November December
January February March April May June July August September October November December
January February March April May June July August September October November December
January February March April May June July August September October November December
January February March April May June July August September October November December