Motion (color)
Motion (black and white)
Fast Shutter Speed:
I used 1/125 photo speed to take picture number 5. Photo 5 used ISO of 1600 and I froze a teacher trimming her plate she had made in ceramics. I was crouched on the floor close to the wheel as she was trimming and used that angle and the rule of thirds to capture the moment.
Slow Shutter Speed:
For photo 8 I used a shutter speed of 1/13 seconds. The ISO and WB were on automatic because i was on my cell phone for the photo. The trees and the roads are shown in a blur suggesting slow speed. I took this photo from a car while driving to my grandmothers.
I used 1/125 photo speed to take picture number 5. Photo 5 used ISO of 1600 and I froze a teacher trimming her plate she had made in ceramics. I was crouched on the floor close to the wheel as she was trimming and used that angle and the rule of thirds to capture the moment.
Slow Shutter Speed:
For photo 8 I used a shutter speed of 1/13 seconds. The ISO and WB were on automatic because i was on my cell phone for the photo. The trees and the roads are shown in a blur suggesting slow speed. I took this photo from a car while driving to my grandmothers.
Painting with light (original)
Painting With Light (Edit)
The signiture with blue:
The photograph itself took 8 complete seconds to be taken. To create the piece with a signiture and blue in the background we used a flashlight and a blue light, a fellow classmate (Devin) wrote his name in a time period of 8 seconds and another student waved the blue light around him. I hope the photo makes people curious and want to make photographs like this themselves.
The photograph itself took 8 complete seconds to be taken. To create the piece with a signiture and blue in the background we used a flashlight and a blue light, a fellow classmate (Devin) wrote his name in a time period of 8 seconds and another student waved the blue light around him. I hope the photo makes people curious and want to make photographs like this themselves.
Aperture (Original)
Aperture (Edited)
My F-stop for this shallow photograph of the operation game was about F22. The ISO was Fluorescent and the white balance was 600. The F-stop for the operation game with a large depth-of-field was about f8. The ISO was fluorescent and the WB was 400. The second seashell photo is better because it clearly portrays aperture. I would use a shallow depth of field when I want something close to me in focus and only that thing. However if i wanted the background in focus a large depth of field would be a much better option.