1. What part of the body should we closely relate aperture? the eyes.
2. Finish this sentence - the smaller the Aperture less light, the higher the Aperture more light.
3. In your own words tell me how aperture impacts Depth of Field? it helps by focusing on one subject, and making the background blurry.
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- fast shutter speed
b.) the food eating contest-slow shutter speed
c.) the rock climbing wall- low shutter speeds
d.) someone working at a booth- slow shutter speed
e.) the DJ/MC working at the middle of the circle- slow shutter speed
f.) the Diamonds performance.-slow 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- slow shutter
b.) the food eating contest- slow shutter speed
c.) the rock climbing wall- low shutter speeds
d.) someone working at a booth- slow shutter speed
e.) the DJ/MC working at the middle of the circle- slow shutter speed
f.) the Diamonds performance.- long shutter speed
2. List the three settings your camera has regarding setting shutter speed (these are found at #5 on the Shutter Speed website.
set the the camera on Auto, when you shoot in "aperture priority" mode, you set the lens aperture, and the camera automatically sets the shutter speed.
1. What are the advantages of shoot at a higher ISO at a sporting event like basketball or a night football game? it increases the sensitivity of your camera.
2. What suggestions did the author make about using a low ISO? you can capture low ISO pictures without the flash.
3. What suggestions did the author make about using a high ISO?it comes at a expense, and adds grain or "noise" to the pictures.
tell me which ones look the best for F4, F5.6 F8, F11, F16, F22.
F4- 1/60 F5.6- 1/60 F8-1/30 F11-1/30 F16-1/15 F22-1/8
F4- the background is blurry and its only focused on the couple.
F5.6- the background is still blurry but you can almost see the image.
F8- the background is almost getting clear.
F11- you can tell what the background is.
F16- the background is still a little bit blurry.
F22- the background is clear and you can definitely see the background.
Finally, what is happening to the people themselves at slow Shutter
Speeds? What could the photographer do to help combat this problem? What
is the lowest Shutter Speed do you think a photographer can hand-hold
the camera? the couples were white faded at first, and then the picture started to recover. i think changing the time and F-stop could help with the problem of the picture.
i think i did well on this test, but i know i could of done better.
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