Monday, October 27, 2014

Aperture, shutter speed, and ISO

Aperture:
f16

F2.8
1. Our eyes relate to aperture
2. The smaller the aperture the larger the f-stop, the larger the aperture the smaller the f-stop
3. Aperture impacts depth and field by making the area that appears sharp.

Shutter speed:
high shutter speed

 slow shutter speed
a.high shutter speed
b.high shutter speed
c.high shutter speed
d.high shutter speed
e.high shutter speed
f.high shutter speed

a. slow shutter speed
b.slow shutter speed
c.slow shutter speed
d.slow shutter speed
e.slow shutter speed
f.slow shutter speed

2.
Auto- shutter speed and aperture are set automatically
manual- where you can set things manually and the way you want
Aperture priority- you set the lens aperture,  and the camera automatically  sets the shutter speed

ISO:
iso 200

iso 3200
1. It is better to use a higher ISO at a sporting event because the higher it is the more quickly it takes the picture and gets the right action moment.
2. The author says when there is plenty of light, you should always use the lowest ISO, to retain the most detail and have the highest image quality.
3. The author says you should increase the ISO when there isn't enough light for the camera to be able to quickly capture the image.

DSLR camera:
aperture settings: 2.8, 4, 5.6, 8, 11, 16, 22
shutter speed settings:  1 sec, 1/60 sec, 1/400 sec
ISO settings: 100, 200, 400, 800, 1600, 3200, 6400, 12800, 25600




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