Hey NS. So I understand what a stop is and the whole scheme of balance in photography between the settings. Like, I could go one stop larger in aperture and one faster in shutter speed and still get the same exposure value.
I also understand that each stops work exponentially, like magnitudes in earthquakes or your bank account interest (but they have different exponential values). I don't know where but I do know that I once read something that said as shutter speed and iso (possibly aperture?) go up, the exposure value doubles for every stop increased. Is that true? If not, please set me straight. Its easy to adjust things quickly to get correct exposures under normal conditions (portraits, sports, etc) but now that I'm doing longer stuff, its getting annoying and I want to be able to predict it beforehand.
From what I know, I'm going to go out on a limb and say that if the last stop of programmed shutter speed in my camera is 30 seconds, the next would be 60, then 120, then 240, 480, etc.
Again, correct me if I'm wrong. Please confirm/deny and correct what I have said throughout this post. Thanks!
Some of my recent work, please critique!