Aperture
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| Baby - Aperture of f2.8 |
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| City - Aperture of f16 |
1.) The pupil is the part of the body that we closely relate to aperture.
2.) The smaller the aperture, the larger the f stop, the larger the aperture the smaller the aperture.3.) The size of the aperture has a direct effect on the depth of field. A larger f number (smaller aperture) will bring all foreground and background objects in focus while have a smaller f number (larger aperture) will make the foreground objects snap and blurry.
Shutter
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| Slow shutter speed |
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| High shutter speed |
At the beginning while the sun was still up and the courtyard had reasonable good light…
a.) a booth in the middle of the yard near the Tree - slow shutter speed
b.) a food booth outside under one of the big red awnings - slow shutter speedc.) the Stars performance inside the gym - fast shutter speed
d.) students dancing near the center of the courtyard - fast shutter speed
e.) people streaming in from the front doors - fast shutter speed
f.) the basketball booth where students are shooting basketballs at a hoop - fast shutter speed
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.) a booth in the middle of the yard near the Tree - slow shutter speed
b.) a food booth outside under one of the big red awnings - slow shutter speed
c.) the Stars performance inside the gym - high shutter speed
d.) students dancing near the center of the courtyard - slow shutter speed
e.) people streaming in from the front doors - high shutter speed
f.) the basketball booth where students are shooting basketballs at a hoop - slow shutter speed
3 Settings on the camera that regards to shutter
1. Aperture priority - you set the lens on aperture, while the camera automatically sets the shutter speed.
2. Shutter priority - set the shutter speed, and and the ca,era automatically sets the aperture.
3. Manual - where you set both the shutter speed and the aperture manually.
ISO
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| ISO - 200 |
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| ISO - 6400 |
1.) The advantage of taking pics at a sporting event at night is that you can choose between high or low ISO, because they are fast moving images at a darker time of day, you get more freedom with that.
2.)You should always try to stick to the lowest ISO (base ISO) of your camera, which is typically ISO 100 or 200, whenever possible. 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. There are some cases where you might want to use low ISO in dim or dark environments.
3.)You should increase the ISO when there is not enough light for the camera to be able to quickly capture an image. Anytime I shoot indoors without a flash, I set my ISO to a higher number to be able to freeze motion. Other cases where you might want to increase ISO are when you need to get ultra-fast shots.
2.)You should always try to stick to the lowest ISO (base ISO) of your camera, which is typically ISO 100 or 200, whenever possible. 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. There are some cases where you might want to use low ISO in dim or dark environments.
3.)You should increase the ISO when there is not enough light for the camera to be able to quickly capture an image. Anytime I shoot indoors without a flash, I set my ISO to a higher number to be able to freeze motion. Other cases where you might want to increase ISO are when you need to get ultra-fast shots.
Camera Settings;
ISO settings: 1600
Apputure settings: 8
Shutter speed settings: 1/60






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