Casey Cheung
Well-known member
- Mar 7, 2011
- 1,234
- 5
- 0
"Blurry pictures" is the result of motion from either the subject or the photographer holding the camera or a combination of the two. If the shutter speed is too slow to stop either the subject in motion or the photographer's inability to hold the camera sufficiently steady, then blurry pictures will occur. Switching to "Pro" mode on my S9 phone camera app allows me to manually change the shutter speed to a higher setting (eg: 1/125 sec, 1/250 sec, etc). A higher shutter speed will stop both subject motion as well as any motion from the photographer holding the camera. If the ambient light source is too low for the higher shutter speed chosen, then you must also choose a higher ISO to compensate (eg: 200, 400, 800+). To say that a camera/phone provides blurry pictures is vague and not particularly useful for diagnosing and solving the problem. It's better to understand that proper exposure for a given subject matter and obtaining the desired effect is a combination of 3 items: Aperture/f-stop, Shutter speed, ISO. Better still, also post an image of the blurry pic and include a screenshot of the EXIF information that will show all the exacting details of the camera settings. A photographer with knowledge of basic exposure principles will be able to avoid blurry pictures most of the time.
Disclosure: I usually photograph with high-end Nikon D-SLRs
Disclosure: I usually photograph with high-end Nikon D-SLRs