Hey I got a quick question that I've always wondered but never really took the time to figure it out.
Let's say I have a scene and the proper settings to expose are 30 seconds at f4. Now let's say that I want the shutter to be open for 60 seconds. How would I properly adjust the aperture to match doubling the shutter? This is all assuming the lighting hasn't changed and is consistent over time.
If I wanted to double the shutter from 30 to 60 seconds, would I also double the aperture from 4 to 8, or would doubling the exposure equal 1 stop of aperture going from 4 to 5.6?
Thank you for taking the time to read!
Here's another example if my phrasing doesn't make sense. So I was shooting a sunset the other day where at 30 seconds, f4, ISO 100 - the exposure was perfect but I wanted streakier clouds. How would I know what aperture to set if I wanted to BULB shoot at 60 seconds, or 120 seconds, and so on. Is there a simple way to know how far to adjust aperture when doubling, tripling, etc. the exposure time?



