CLA:
Wow. You learn something new everyday.............
nudi and scorpionfish with black bckgrnd: F/8, 1/250sec (w/flash)
getting back to your black background.....
My definition of the "background" of an image is any part of the composition that is not influenced by strobe light. The part that is influenced by strobe light I refer to as the "foreground".
The background exposure as I mentioned previously is controlled by the aperture and the shutter speed. The aperture refers to the size of the iris opening leading to the sensor. The shutter speed controls how much time light will be allowed to pass through the iris and subsequently be captured by the sensor.
Although 1/250 sec may not be considered an extremely fast shutter speed, when combined with a relatively small aperture such as f/8, very little ambient light is able to be reflected back into the lens on it's way to the sensor. The resulting background color as you confirmed with your images will most likely become black.
by the way, the aperture and shutter speed combinations of :
f/8 at 1/250 sec
f/5.6 at 1/500 sec
f/4 at 1/1000 sec
will all allow a similar amount of light to pass through the lens and shutter and through to the sensor.
When I chose f/5.6 in the above example, I doubled the size of the lens opening with relationship to f/8. But I also halved the amount of time the shutter remained opened by increasing the speed from 1/250 to 1/500. Larger opening, shorter time the shutter allowed to expose the sensor to light= similar result. The term for this is reciprocity.
Why is reciprocity important to understand? Some day your goal may be to control depth of field. Another day you may wish to control motion blur. On another dive trip you may wish to choose an aperture that maximizes image sharpness (not talking DOF). And some day you may wish to control the background exposure of your composition. By understanding the relationship between shutter and aperture, you will be able to predict what combination of the two will yield the preferred result you desire.
btw,
two stops from wide open will probably result in the "sharpest" image
the smaller the aperture, an increase in DOF
the smaller the aperture, the darker the background
the larger the aperture, the lighter the background
the faster the shutter speed, the less likelyhood of capturing motion blur
the faster the shutter speed, the darker the background
the slower the shutter speed, the lighter the background
btw,
increases in depth of field are not always the most desirable goal. At times choosing a wider aperture to limit DOF is a technique used for increasing the viewers interest to a particular part of the composition that remains in focus when everything else is OOF.
hth,
b