Reciprocity
Reciprocity is the rule that states that if, beginning with the correct
shutter/aperture combination to yield a perfect exposure, the shutter
speed is adjusted in one direction (faster, for example) and the aperture
is adjusted correspondingly in the opposite direction (opened up, for this
example), the exposure will be the same.
Each combination would yield the same correct exposure. What would
change would be the amount of blur in a moving subject (or moving
photographer) as the shutter speeds got longer, or the amount of depth
of fi eld in the image as the aperture became progressively smaller.
Note that this is a constant rule only when the light source itself is
constant. Sunlight and most available light is “constant” in that it
doesn’t change over the course of the exposure. Fluorescent lights
are not considered “constant” because they fl icker on and off 60 times
per second. Studio strobes and on camera fl ash units are not constant
sources of light because they fi re and expire somewhere between the
time the shutter actually opens and closes, so the amount of light they
produce may be fi gured into the equation (like fi ll fl ash) and used to
advantage to either supplement existing light or overpower it.
Back in the days of fi lm, most of us were trained to think in terms of whole
stops and half-stops. In other words, I might have told my assistant to “get
me 11 and a half” if I wanted a little more light. Canon’s EF Series of lenses,
designed for the EOS camera family, easily work in thirds of stops, much
more accurate for the touchy digital environment. Similarly, digital cameras
have added additional shutter speeds to refl ect the additional aperture
settings.
Should you decide to set your camera to work in half-stop
increments, here’s how the reciprocity scale would work for the same These are not complete scales, of course. There are lenses with a
maximum aperture greater than f2.8 and there are lenses that stop down
below f22, but the principle remains the same and can easily be charted
for whatever lenses you may own.