Photography - 101: (101 The Basics)
Photography - 101: (101 The Basics)
Photography - 101: (101 The Basics)
101
Sunlight
FlashLight
Moonlight
Good Light Incandescent
Bad Light U.V. Light
Soft Light Black Light
Harsh Light Fluorescent
Storm Light Indirect/Bounce
Highlights
Exposure is the
total amount of
light allowed to fall
on the film/image
sensor
Too much light creates
an over-bright image
with white spots: parts
of the image are Over-
Exposed
Too little light creates an
under-bright image with
black spots: parts of the
image are Under-
Exposed
and
Shutter
Speed
Aperture is the size of the
opening in the lens that allows
light through the lens similar
to an eyes pupil
Low f-stop =
High aperture =
Large opening =
More light =
Higher Exposure
High f-stop =
Low aperture =
Small opening =
Less light =
Lower Exposure
Apertures
Aperture, measured in f stops, determines the size of the opening in
your lens, which controls how much light strikes your filming during
an exposure. The smaller the number, the larger the opening.
The larger the number, the smaller the opening. Aperture also
determines depth of field
smaller the aperture, the greater the depth of field.
O o o o
o o o
f2.8 f4 f5.6 f8 f11 f16 f22
Each f stop change lets in either 2 times or the amount of light,
depending on whether you are opening up or stopping down.
Open up means to make the opening larger (but a smaller
number). Stop down means selecting an aperture that is smaller in
size (but bigger in number)
Shutter Speed
Shutter speeds appear as whole numbers, but are
really fractions:
1/60 sec., 1/125 sec., 1/250 sec., 1/500 sec.
Therefore 1/60 is a
slower shutter speed than
1/125, etc.
When you change 1 stop in
Shutter speed, you are letting in
either 2 times or
the amount of light-
) is the measure
rating
(size
Film speed 50 ISO/ASA low low low
of a photographic film's
sensitivity to light, 100 medium medium medium
determined by meters and ISO/ASA
Remember aperture,
shutter speed, and
film speed (ISO) all
combine to affect Low ISO Low ISO, Long Exposure High ISO, Long
Exposure
the image be
careful not to forget
what youve set them
to!
Photographic paper (printing)
Have 5 elements
1.Base: Fiber or Resin Coated(RC)
2.Contrast: Variable (multiple) or Graded
3.Surface: Glossy, Satin/pearl or Matt
4.Size: postcard to 24x28
5.Emulsion: Monochromatic or Panchromatic and others
Blurry Blues
Have to be careful blur is not always obvious at
first!