Friday, October 2, 2015

Shutter Speed

High shutter speed                                            Low shutter speed

 


1.

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 (low shutter speed)
b.) a food booth outside under one of the big red awnings (low)
c.) the Stars performance inside the gym (high)
d.) students dancing near the center of the courtyard ( high)
e.) people streaming in from the front doors (low)
f.) the basketball booth where students are shooting basketballs at a hoop (high)

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 (low)
b.) a food booth outside under one of the big red awnings (low)
c.) the Stars performance inside the gym (high)
d.) students dancing near the center of the courtyard (high with flash)
e.) people streaming in from the front doors (low with flash)
f.) the basketball booth where students are shooting basketballs at a hoop (high with flash)

2. 

The three settings your camera has regarding setting shutter speed are aperture priority, shutter priority, and manual. In the aperture priority setting, the photographer can choose the lens aperture while the camera, automatically sets the correct shutter speed for the photo. Shutter priority is the complete opposite. The camera chooses the correct lens aperture and the photographer picks the right shutter speed for the photo that they are about to shoot. Lastly, the Manual mode is where the photographer chooses the lens aperture and the shutter speed.

No comments:

Post a Comment