QUIZ B
2.) Photograph a moving subject and create a blur
f/22.0
.8
ISO 800
d.) I set the camera on the ground and angled it up to get the whole stairs in the photo. I set the shutter speed really slow, and changed all the settings to get the thing in the middle. I put the camera on continuous shooting, and I took like 10 photos of Avani sliding down the rail.
3.) Photograph a subject and incorporate grain/noise
f/7.1
1/80
ISO 6400
d.) I held the camera in my hand and made the focal length shorter. I set the ISO the highest it would go because high ISO makes photos grainy. I made all the settings to get the thing in the middle. This photo was actually done on accident because the person before me set it on a timer.
1.) Photograph a subject and incorporate a large depth of field
f/14.0
1/250
ISO 800
d.) I held the camera really close to this fence and made my aperture higher. I focused the picture and took the photo. I like it.
4.) Take a portrait-style selfie using the timer and aperture priority/value
f/5.0
1/50
ISO 800
d.) I set the camera on the ledge sideways to get it portrait style. I set all the settings for the stairs (focus and everything), and I hit the button and ran to the stairs. This took me a bunch of tries.
e.) I've learned that if you increase aperture, you should decrease shutter speed and ISO.
And if you decrease aperture, you should increase shutter speed and ISO. I also learned that portrait is sideways. I learned that a high ISO makes a photo grainy, and a high aperture makes for a large depth of field. I learned that a slow shutter speed makes a motion photo blurry, and a fast shutter speed stops motion. I learned what aperture priority and advanced exposure modes do. I learned that aperture is how much light is let in, shutter speed is how long the shutter is open, and how ISO is the camera's sensitivity to light. I learned what white balance is, and how to get different focal lengths. I learned how to use the little pictures at the top of the camera, and I learned that there is a lot more to photography than pointing and shooting a photo.
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