Photography Fundamentals

The Exposure
Triangle

Three forces, one perfect image. Learn how aperture, shutter speed, and ISO shape every photograph — and feel it in real time.

Try the simulator below
ISO SS AP
Interactive Simulator
Adjust. See. Understand.
EV 0.0
Exposure
Aperture f/5.6
f/1.4 wide open narrow f/16

Moderate aperture — balanced depth of field, some background blur, subject is sharp.

● Light: moderate ● DoF: medium
Shutter Speed 1/125s
1/1000s fast slow 1/4s

Fast enough to freeze everyday subjects cleanly. Safe handheld shutter speed.

● Light: medium-low ● Motion: frozen
ISO ISO 400
100 clean noisy 6400

ISO 400 — slight digital noise. Good for indoors or overcast daylight.

● Sensitivity: medium ● Noise: slight
The Three Elements
Know each side
of the triangle
01
f/1.4 → f/16
Aperture

The iris opening inside your lens controls how much light reaches the sensor. A wide aperture (low f-number like f/1.8) isolates your subject with beautiful background blur called bokeh. A narrow aperture (f/11, f/16) brings the entire scene into sharp focus — front to back.

f/1.4 f/5.6 f/16
02
1/1000s → 1/4s
Shutter Speed

How long the shutter stays open determines motion. A fast shutter (1/500s) freezes a basketball in mid-flight. A slow shutter (1/15s) turns motion into silk — flowing waterfalls, streaking city lights, the ghost of a passing crowd. It's also how you control light in long-exposure photography.

1/1000 1/60s 1/4s
03
ISO 100 → 6400
ISO

The sensor's sensitivity to light. Low ISO (100) gives you clean, grain-free images in good light. High ISO (1600+) lets you shoot in the dark but at a cost — digital noise, or grain, creeps into the image. The goal is always the lowest ISO that still gives a correct exposure.

ISO 100 — clean ISO 6400 — noisy