Photography light calculator

The combination of shutter speed, aperture and film speed/ISO (and light modifiers) are expressed as EV or "Exposure Value". This number depends on the amount of light present in a scene, either natural light (sun/moon) or artificial (strobe/lamp). A difference of 1 in EV corresponds to 1 "stop" (+1 stop = 2 x more light). This calculation is valid for both analog and digital photography
A ND (neutral density) filter is a piece of glass you can mount on a lens that attenuates the light without influencing the colors

Camera settings

Aperture: f/0.7 - very wide aperture, expensive, prime lens

Shutter: 0.00013 sec - fast exposure, needs good light

ISO: 6400 ASA - high ISO, lots of noise, only with very good digital camera

Neutral Density filter: 5 stop(s) - to allow for bigger aperture and slower shutter speeds in daylight

Scene lighting: EV10.9

-5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
starlight to dim ambient lightmoon eclipse to night home interiorneon lights to landscape after sunsetbright light to weak sunbright daylight to direct sunlight
  • Pure Exposure Value: EV100 = 11.88 (based on shutter & aperture)
  • APEX Exposure Value: EV6400 = 5.88 (based on shutter, aperture, ISO)
  • Corrected APEX Value: 10.88 (based on shutter, aperture, ISO and ND)
  • Luminance: 238.9 cd/m² = 22.19 cd/ft²
  • Luminance: 69.7 ftL (foot Lambert)
  • Illuminance: 4777 lux
  • Illuminance: 444 fc (foot-candle)

Explanation

EV is an estimation of how much light you need for a decent photo with these settings. If you use camera settings for EV10 and you actually have EV15 in your scene, your photo will be overexposed. If you use camera settings for EV10 but you only have EV3 light in your scene, your photo will be underexposed.

Examples

References