Monday, November 17, 2014

Camera Basics Quiz



Group A


 
ISO- 200
Aperture- f/4.0
Shutter Speed- 1/13
To create a small depth of field I lowered my aperture so that my flowers would be in focus while my background would be blurred and made sure that my exposure meter was evened out.  


ISO-3200
Aperture- f/3.5
Shutter Speed-1/200
To capture a moving subject and freeze the motion was accomplished by changing the shutter speed to a lower faction of a second. Meaning the shutter is open for less time and is able to capture that movement. Once the shutter speed was faster I adjusted the aperture to even out the exposer meter.


ISO-200
Aperture- f/4.0
Shutter Speed-1/5
To keep this photograph void of grain was all about the ISO. For this photograph I had a low aperture making the background blurry but had no grain thanks to the ISO of 200 because of my lighting.


ISO-200
Aperture- f/6.3
Shutter Speed-3"
Although this photograph is creepy it is what I took from the prompt to "take a blurred motion selfie using the timer". So I figured the photograph had to show motion, so what I did was set the timer for 10 seconds and made sure I had a slow shutter speed and that my exposure meter was evened out. Once I hit the button to take the picture I waited the ten seconds for the camera to take the picture. Halfway through the photo I changed positions so that my background would be clear while I was not clear because of my motion.



Summary
Overall through this unit I learned about aperture and how basically a low number, meaning a small depth of field would just have the subject in the front clear while the rest is blurry. Then a large depth of field has everything in clear view and a high number. For shutter speed I learned that the faster the shutter speed the faster the shutter will close being able to capture the motion without blur compared to a slow shutter having blur. ISO is how the camera is going to react with the light. Last, white balance is simply how the whites are going to show in the photograph.


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