Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - SLR and mirrorless shooting effects

SLR and mirrorless shooting effects

The SLR uses the reflection of light to finally image the image inside the camera, while the mirrorless single does not have a reflector or a pentaprism inside. The mirrorless uses an electronic sensor for framing. The mirrorless does not have a prism, so the structure Much smaller. The specific camera image quality depends on the camera lens and the camera's sensor. However, the shooting effect of the two is better than that of a SLR, because the internal parts of a SLR are more complex and the optical sensor records the scene more accurately.

Single Lens Reflex Camera (SingleLensReflexCamera), also known as SLR camera, refers to a camera that uses a single lens, and the light shines on the reflector through this lens, and the view is taken through the reflection.

The so-called "single lens" means that the photographic exposure light path and the viewing light path use one lens. It is not like a rangefinder camera or a double-lens reflex camera that has an independent lens for the viewing light path. "Reflective" refers to a flat mirror inside the camera that separates the two light paths. The first SLR camera was developed in 1909. Since the 1970s, this technology has been widely used, and SLR cameras have become the new favorite of advanced photography enthusiasts and professional photographers.

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