PhotoNotes site navigation. About. Dictionary. Articles. Reviews. LOOKUP | FORUM | DONATIONS

 

The PhotoNotes.org Dictionary of Film and Digital Photography.

-----


Focal plane shutter.

A camera shutter which lies inside the camera body, immediately in front of the film surface. Such shutters are rectangular and made of narrow blinds or curtains which move along, exposing the film surface to light. Since they use moving curtains they are vulnerable to the X-sync problem when used with flash photography.

Most SLRs have focal plane shutters, which are of the behind-the-lens kind. Not all cameras do, however. Other cameras place the shutter within the lens itself - leaf shutters.

cf. behind the lens, curtain, flash synchronization, focal plane, leaf shutter, single lens reflex (SLR).

Entry last updated 2002-04-04. Term 519 of 1487.


Previous term: focal plane mark.

Next term: focal point.

 


-----

This document is copyright © 2002-2008 NK Guy, PhotoNotes.org. This information is provided with neither warranties nor claims of accuracy or completeness of any sort. Use this information at your own risk. All trademarks mentioned herein belong to their respective owners.

You may copy and print this document for your own personal use. You may not, however, reprint or republish this work, in whole or in part, without prior permission from me, the author. Such republication includes inclusion of this work in other Web sites, Web pages, FTP archives, books, magazines or other periodicals, CD-ROM and DVD-ROM compilations or any other form of publication or distribution. Please do not frame this site within another.

Please send comments or error reports using the feedback form.

-----