Sim Cam
f 4- 1/125 sec, the background is blurred out but the people aren't and there not that bright but there not to dark its perfect.
f 5.6- 1/60 sec, you can almost see the background and it gives it brightness it looks pretty.
f 8- 1/60 sec, This one makes the look more brighter but its not like really bright and there not blurry.
f 11- 1/60 sec, now you can see the background but the people are kinda dark but its okay its not an ugly dark.
f 16- 1/30 sec, On this one you see everything kinda clearly the background and the people.
f 22- 1/8 sec, this one you see everything the people and background and it has light.
when the shutter gets lower the people get really blurry so the photographer can fix the problem by maybe like changing there positions or put the in another place. The longest shutter speed would be typically 30 seconds.
Camera sim
i did pretty good i did understood aperture, shutter speed, and ISO better now, now i now like the difference between them and what they do.
Thursday, November 29, 2012
ISO
ISO
1.The higher ISO it has noise it adds grain to the picture and gets a better shot.
2. That when there is plenty of light you should always use the lowest ISO to retain the most detail and to have the highest image quality and there are some cases where you might want to use low ISO in dim or dark environments.
3. He suggested that you should increase the ISO when there is not enough light for the am era to be able yo quickly capture an image.
1.The higher ISO it has noise it adds grain to the picture and gets a better shot.
2. That when there is plenty of light you should always use the lowest ISO to retain the most detail and to have the highest image quality and there are some cases where you might want to use low ISO in dim or dark environments.
3. He suggested that you should increase the ISO when there is not enough light for the am era to be able yo quickly capture an image.
Shutter Speed
Once you are finished reading about Shutter Speed, I want you to use google and find me an example of a photo taken with a high shutter speed and one taken at a slow shutter speed (you do not have to show blur unless you want but I still need to see an example of a photo that COULD have been taken at a slow shutter speed). Post them both on your blog and label them.
Then answer the following questions:
1. If you were assigned to shoot at Blue and Gold night, which was earlier this month, what shutter speeds do you think you would have to shoot at the following events that night I would like you to answer the question for the following two situations:
At the beginning while the sun is still partially up and the courtyard has reasonable light
a.) the dunking booth; high shutter
b.) the food eating contest; slow shutter
c.) the rock climbing wall; Slow shutter
d.) someone working at a booth; slow shutter
e.) the DJ/MC working at the middle of the circle; Slow shutter
f.) the Diamonds performance;High shutter
Towards the end when there is no sun and has gotten dark enough that you can't see from one end of the courtyard to the other.
a.) the dunking booth;High shutter
b.) the food eating contest;Slow shutter
c.) the rock climbing wall; High shutter
d.) someone working at a booth;Slow shutter
e.) the DJ/MC working at the middle of the circle; High shutter
f.) the Diamonds performance; Slow shutter
2. Aperture priority: when you set the lens to aperture while the camera sets itself to the shutter speed.
Shutter priority: when you set it to the shutter speed and the camera sets itself to aperture.
Manual: where you set the camera on both shutter speed and aperture.
Friday, November 16, 2012
Aperture, shutter Speed, ISO
Aperture
F2.8
F16
1. The pupil of our eye closely relates aperture.
2. The smaller the Aperture f-number the larger aperture opening.
3. In your own words tell me how aperture impacts Depth of Field? The size aperture impacts depth of field, if a larger f- number with means a smaller aperture so it will would have a focus background and if a small f-number will make the background blurry and the object sharp.
F2.8
F161. The pupil of our eye closely relates aperture.
2. The smaller the Aperture f-number the larger aperture opening.
3. In your own words tell me how aperture impacts Depth of Field? The size aperture impacts depth of field, if a larger f- number with means a smaller aperture so it will would have a focus background and if a small f-number will make the background blurry and the object sharp.
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