Mr.AndroidShin / Dev Tools

Photography · Exposure

Exposure Calculator

Set a baseline shot, and see every shutter speed + ISO pair that gives the same brightness. Built for phone Pro/manual mode, where the aperture is usually fixed — so you trade shutter for ISO. Freeze motion by going faster, or drop noise by going lower, without changing the exposure. All local, in your browser.

EV (at ISO 100)
ShutterISOSame brightness — good for

Aperture stays fixed across the table (as on most phones); it only shifts the EV number. Change it if your camera or phone lets you.

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How the trade works

Exposure is set by three things: aperture (how wide the lens opens), shutter speed (how long light hits the sensor), and ISO (how much the signal is amplified). On a phone the aperture is usually fixed, so you're left balancing two: shutter and ISO. Make the shutter one stop faster and you halve the light — so you raise ISO one stop to put it back. That's what every row of the table above is: the same total exposure, split differently.

Which pair should you pick?

What EV tells you

EV (exposure value) is a single number for "how much light" a setting lets in, referenced to ISO 100. Lower EV means a darker scene needs more light; higher EV means a bright scene. It's mostly a sanity check here — the useful part is the equivalence table, which shows your real, on-device options.

FAQ

Does this control my camera?

No — it's a reference calculator. You read the pair you want and dial it into your phone's Pro/manual mode yourself. Nothing is sent anywhere.

My phone has no aperture setting.

That's normal — most phones have a fixed aperture. Leave it at your phone's value (often around f/1.8) and just use the shutter/ISO table.

Why do all rows say "same brightness"?

Because they are equivalent exposures. The point is that many settings give the same brightness — you choose the one whose side effects (motion freeze vs noise) suit the shot.

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