Clay2
Member
Hi Phillipe,
Thanks for the interesting story, I laughed!
Had the same type argument with the instructors at The New York School of Photography over how to
photograph the full moon. They insisted that the moon was in full sunlight and to use the 'Sunny-16' Rule,
f/16, 1/film speed. I said yeah, it is in full sunlight but on the other side of the Earth and much farther
away. The inverse square law says that the amount of radiation from a source varies inversely as the
square of the distance from the source. I used the 'Looney-11' Rule, f/11, 1/film speed. Mine were the
only decent shots of the full moon. The instructors avoided me from then on, sigh.
Best regards,
/Clay
Thanks for the interesting story, I laughed!
Had the same type argument with the instructors at The New York School of Photography over how to
photograph the full moon. They insisted that the moon was in full sunlight and to use the 'Sunny-16' Rule,
f/16, 1/film speed. I said yeah, it is in full sunlight but on the other side of the Earth and much farther
away. The inverse square law says that the amount of radiation from a source varies inversely as the
square of the distance from the source. I used the 'Looney-11' Rule, f/11, 1/film speed. Mine were the
only decent shots of the full moon. The instructors avoided me from then on, sigh.
Best regards,
/Clay