Fast Shutter-Speed (School)
Reflection
I chose the picture of the pinwheel as my fast shutter-speed photo. The shutter-speed used to freeze the photo was 1/800 of a second. The ISO is 400 and the white balance for the photo is cloudy. I froze the pinwheel while it was in mid spin, I froze it to make it seem as if it was not spinning although it was. I took the picture fairly close to the pinwheel and a little lower then eye level view of the pinwheel so the sky could show. This follows the rule of thirds because it is not directly in the center of the photo. The negative space is behind the pinwheel as the same repetitive colors are used within the pinwheel.
Slow Shutter-Speed (School)
Reflection
I chose the 3rd photo which is the cards emerging out from a hand. The shutter-speed used for this photo is 1/30 of a second. The ISO is 800 and the white balance is incandescent. The cards in the photo are the factor that shows blur. I am really close to the cards in this photo and took the image at eye level to really get to show all of the cards. The rule of thirds is followed in this photo because it is not centered and spreads all around the photo itself.
Fast Shutter-Speed (Home)
Slow Shutter-Speed (Home)
Painting With Light
I chose my second picture for the painting of light. There is a series of colors on top in more of a straight line and a reddish orange light moving like a wave on the bottom. The shutter-speed was about 4 seconds for the photo. The light was almost completely dark in the photo and used a variety of colors. I put the aperture on around f29 and someone moved around with the ray of lights for the 4 seconds of the photo.
Aperture
The image I chose that has a shallow depth of field is the 5th picture of the grey wall. The f-stop in this photo is a 2.8 because only part is in focus. The ISO is around 1600 when this image was taken and the WB was at Auto.
An image I chose for large depth of field is the first picture of the dice. The f-stop the camera was set on to create a large depth of field is 5.6. The ISO is around 1600 as-well and the WB is at Auto.
The photo of the dice is better because it looks half focus and half not focus and also because theres a light on the dice. You would want to use a shallow depth of field to focus on a small and very specific thing. You would want to use a large depth of field to focus on something bigger or make something half and half focused.
An image I chose for large depth of field is the first picture of the dice. The f-stop the camera was set on to create a large depth of field is 5.6. The ISO is around 1600 as-well and the WB is at Auto.
The photo of the dice is better because it looks half focus and half not focus and also because theres a light on the dice. You would want to use a shallow depth of field to focus on a small and very specific thing. You would want to use a large depth of field to focus on something bigger or make something half and half focused.