2. Shutter SpeedShutter speed is the length of time the camera has
exposed through the lens, so it has time to focus on the
light being let in. Shutter speed can help with avoiding
colours and saturation being blurred. If the area you wish
to take a picture of is a dark area, a long exposure is
needed to allow the camera to focus and get the correct
lighting, where if you were to take a light picture, the
exposure would be short as the camera would focus on
the light coming in through the lens as it is easy to
detect. Too much exposure on a light image could cause
the image of over exposed and blurred. Shutter speed is
also a good feature for moving light, as my example
image shows. In the image features my friends friend,
Jacques Laycock on the skate park doing a trick called a
flair. At the time I took this image, it was slightly dark but
there was some lighting from lamp posts very close by
which highlighted Jacques. I used a medium shutter
speed therefore Jacques is in focus and not blurred apart
from near his feet and head, where it has blurred a little
bit from the way he does the trick, where the shutter
speed came into action and caused this effect.
Exposure time // ¼ sec.
3. Shutter Speed
Fast Shutter Speed Slow Shutter Speed
Exposure time // ¼ sec.
Exposure time // 1/60 sec.
Exposure time // ½ sec. Exposure time //30 sec.
Exposure time // ¼ sec.
4. Iso
Iso is the amount of light let in by the lens,
which can affect the white balance of the
image, as my example photographs on the
right explain with their captions as the
level of ISO setting. ISO means the lower
the setting of it, the darker the image
appears, and the lighter the image the
higher the ISO setting. Most ISO settings
used for everyday, normal photographs
are around 200-1600. The most common
setting used of ISO for bright situations
like sunlight, is around 100/200. If the
subject you would be photographing is
dark, a high ISO setting could help the
image improve.
ISO // 6400
ISO // 3200
ISO // 400
ISO // 1600
ISO // 200
ISO // 800
ISO // 100
6. Aperture & Depth of Field
• Explanation of term e.g.
what it is used for / the
effect it has on your
images
F-stop // 5
F-stop // 5.6
Aperture is in the lens of the camera, it
can be adjusted to control the amount of
light being let in which can act as a light
sensor. The size of the aperture can
effect the image’s exposure to light.
Depth of field is the foreground, middle
ground and background, and what
appears to be ‘sharp’ or in focus. It is
what the camera lens focus’ on more than
the rest of the image, which it then gives
the rest of the image a slight blur to make
the ‘sharp’ subject in focus and the main
focus point.
7. Aperture & Depth of Field
Narrow Depth of Field Wide Depth of Field
F-stop // 4.5 F-stop // 5
8. Manual Exposure
Manual Exposure in photography is the
user of the camera’s settings. This means,
who ever is using the camera, changed
the ISO, shutter speed, depth of field and
the 3X3 grid to their needs. Such as my
example image to the right of my friend,
Olivia, I changed the settings so the back
of her head was visible in decent lighting
and the screen was a bit blurred to make
her hair the main focus.
With the image at the bottom, I took it from
my Fujifilm Finepix camera, so the quality
isn’t as good, but it was on manual setting
so I changed the settings to capture the
separation in the sky.
F-Stop // 4
Exposure time // 1/50 sec.
ISO // 1600
9. Automatic Exposure
Automatic Exposure in photography is the
camera’s ‘normal’ settings. This applies by
the user of the camera, doesn’t change
anything before taking the photograph.
Sometimes the image can appear dark
(like my example) or too light depending
on the lighting situation. Sometimes
automatic exposure can be the right
setting but a majority of the time, manual
exposure is used. The manual exposure of
my example image was naturally dark, but
the computer screen lit up making it the
main focus because it is a light source.
With the bottom image, the automatic
exposure was dark as it is the same
picture of the sky as the previous slide, but
it is darker due to the camera only noticing
the darker part of the sky.
F-Stop // 4
Exposure time // 1/25 sec.
ISO // 100
10. Rule of thirds
• Explanation of term e.g.
what it is used for / the
effect it has on your
images
Rule of thirds is the 3X3 grid you can
usually see on a cameras settings.
Everything has the grid as it makes it a bit
easier to take image such as digital
cameras and IPhones. The grid helps to
take image as it helps to focus on the
main subject, such as my example images
of my friend Shauna. In these two images,
she is stood/sat in the central column,
making the viewers eye go to her first.
Close-up images can improve the grid by
the subject over lapping the crossing lines
in the central square, and as they would fill
up most of the image.