Deleting Distracting Objects
~ fast ~ Motion ~slow~
Fast Shutter Speed
Slow Shutter Speed
- shutter speed 1/125
- ISO 3200
- i used all the default white balance settings
- Froze someone drawing a picture
- The shot was taken a few inches on the side of the subject
- The use of black and white enhances the photo by showing all the ranges of pencil the drawer uses in his photo
Slow Shutter Speed
- 1/30
- ISO 800
- i used all the default white balance settings
- the turning umbrella and wheel was the blurry points in the images
- all pictures were taken a few feet from the subject
- i focused on positive and negative space in these photos. for example, in the top photo the positive space is Victoria and her umbrella and the negative space is the background of the shot
Painting with Light
painting with light pt. 2 : with hue editing
- In the photo I took of Drew, he sat down while holding lights around him and someone swung the yellow lights behind his head in a circular motion
- I had the camera set on 4-6 seconds
- There was a phone flashlight in the upper left side of the portrait to create a light source
- I achieved the photo by asking him to sit down and stay still while Macy swung yellow lights behind his head. By taking the picture over a period of 4-6 seconds, the lights are literally being "painted" across the photo
- The photo has a dramatic impact on the viewer. The facial expression along with the choice of lighting defines the dramatic and deep aspect of this photo.
Aperture
Shallow Depth of Field
- f-stop: 2.8
- ISO: high 2
- WB: auto
- f-stop: 16
- ISO: high 2
- WB: auto
- I believe the photo with a shallow depth of field is better because the item I was photographing was in the foreground, which puts more emphasis on it
- You would want to use a shallow depth of field in the case of trying to focus on one singular subject rather than the whole image
- You would want to use a large depth of field if photographing an image where you want all aspects being shown in both the background and foreground