Hello,
I'm entirely new with DSLR photography after having spent 3 years with pocket cameras, most recently a Nikon 1 J3 which had a nice range of settings. It was with this camera that I've more or less learnt to understand the basics of shutterspeed, ISO values, aperture, and white balance. It could shoot in RAW, but I've only attempted post-processing a handful of images, preferring JPEG instead.
A few days ago I've replaced my Nikon camera with a Canon D1200, which came with an additional telelens (EF 75-300mm, f/4-5.6). Because of an upcoming trip I'm entirely dedicated to honing my landscape photography skills on this new camera, and I've noticed some striking differences between my new DSLR and my old J3. Trial and error is best, and I've clearified quite a few things through practice. However, it would be great if someone could elaborate on the following points.
1. On my J3 I eventually found that f/9 was the most pleasant aperture setting for colour in my pictures (in retrospect this could've been WB adjustment, but I'm not sure). I've tried the entire range of aperture settings, which was somewhere between f/3 and 3/16. I've read that aperture correlates with depth of field, yet I've only noticed this on my DSLR and not on my J3 at all (the image was focussed entirely at all aperture settings). On my DSLR I see drastic changes in focus between aperture settings (and the individual subjects I focus on). Can someone elaborate on this?
2. I live in the Netherlands, so I can't yet experiment on mountains and landscape photography is limited to distant farm animals and windmills, thus: what aperture settings are best for landscape photography in a mountainous area in which I want focus on the entirety of the landscape?
3. On aperture: the lenses have something like f/3.5-5.6 written on them; I've heard this is aperture range. Does this mean that apertures such as f/16 won't affect my shot? What exactly do these figures indicate?
4. On this subject I've read something on 'lens sweetspot', and that although a higher aperture results in wider focus a lower aperture results in a sharper image. How does this correlate and which generally takes preference? Dependent on the subject, of course.
5. On my J3, I've noticed that ISO 400, 1/100 shutter speed, and f/7 at dim lighting gave a much brighter (or less underexposed) image than an image taken with the same settings on the DSLR, why?
6. Is it "safe" to shoot in high ISO values such as 6400, given that you can largely reduce noise in post-processing? I've substituted shutter speed for ISO in churches where no flash (nor tripod) was allowed).
7. Should I actually be bothered about white balance on my DSLR (shooting in RAW) given that I can change it on my computer?
I most likely come up with more questions just after I've posted this message, but it would be of great help if someone could help me out with these points.
Thanks,
Twan