I duplicated miltw by being soooo slow. This might help in the future, and you may want to make a little cheat sheet. f-stops f/1.2, f/1.4, f/2, f/2.8, f/4, f/5.6/ f/8, f/11, f/16, f/22, and f/32 are "standard" or "full" f-stops. Moving a single f-stop is the same as changing the shutter speed by halving or doubling. f/8 at 1/500 is the "same" exposure as f/16 at 1/250. Each halving or doubling; by moving from 1/250 to 1/500 is also a full stop. There are "half" stops, or "non-standard" stops on most modern lenses, like f/1.8, and more often f/3.5 which can get in the way of quick calculations; just because you've moved the f-stop ring one click may not mean you've adjusted one standard stop. But if you're depending on your built in meter then... If there is a tricky exposure, the backlit face, or something like that, move very close to your subject and take a light reading with the built in meter at close range, then use that exposure for your shot. Or use a concrete surface to set an "over-all" exposure reading. The palm of your hand is about 2 stops lighter than an 18% grey card, which by the way, can be purchased at any photographic outlet for under $10, and often under $5. Now-a-days, gray cards come with a white face so digi people can set white balance. And f-stop, in case you're wondering why f-16 is a different diameter in your telephoto than it is in your wide angle lens, is the relationship of the len's focal length ("f" stop) to it's aperture. For a 50mm lens, f-2 would be 1/2 of the focal length, therefore an aperture of 25mm. An f-stop of f-16, (1/16) for a 50mm lens, would be an aperture of 3.125mm. I hope some of this has been of help. Exposure is what it's all about. I might suggest going to the library, or going on line, and picking up books on the Zone System, which may help explain the relationship of light and time.