2. • The shutter speed is the unit of
measurement which determines
how long the shutter remains
open as the picture is taken. The
slower the shutter speed, the
longer the exposure time which
makes movement blur as seen in
the photos at the side. Or if the
shutter speed is higher the
subject stays still.
• These photos show the difference
shutter speed can make the
above is taken on a slow shutter
speed (1second) and the below
had a faster shutter speed (1/25
seconds) and you can see the
difference it makes as the slower
one blurs the movement and the
faster gets a still of the object.
SHUTTER SPEED
3. • Stick an example image here
• The above was shot on a 1/25 second exposure time. The above is was shot in a 1 second exposu
SHUTTER SPEED
Fast Shutter Speed Slow Shutter Speed
4. • ISO is similar to film speed on film
cameras. Unlike aperture and
shutter speed, ISO doesn't control
how much light enters the
camera, but instead controls how
sensitive the camera is to that
light. The lower the ISO, the less
sensitive the camera is. In other
words, a lower ISO will require
more light to properly expose a
picture than a higher ISO.
• A lower ISO will produce a higher
quality image but requires more
light to expose a picture.
• A higher ISO will produce a lower
quality image but requires less
light to expose a picture.
• Stick am example image here
ISO
5. • Stick an example image here• Stick an example image here
ISO
High ISO Low ISO
ISO- 1600 ISO- 110
6. • Depth of Field is the distance in
front of and beyond the subject
that appears to be in focus. It’s
not a fixed distance, it changes
in size and can be described as
either ‘shallow’ (where only a
narrow zone appears sharp) or
deep (where more of the picture
appears sharp). The aperture
can also affect light for example
when taking a the photo of the
sun I had to put the aperture all
the way up so it only lets a little
amount of light in. But when its
dark you have to set the
aperture at a small amount so
more light can get into the lens.
• Stick am example image here
APERTURE & DEPTH OF FIELD
7. • Stick an example image here• Stick an example image here
APERTURE & DEPTH OF FIELD
Shallow Depth of Field Long Depth of Field
8. • In the rule of thirds, photos are
divided into thirds with two
imaginary lines vertically and
two lines horizontally making
three columns, three rows, and
nine sections in the images.
Important compositional
elements and leading lines are
placed on or near the imaginary
lines and where the lines
intersect.
• In my photo the centre of the
subject (the bench) meets
where two of the lines intersect,
so it seems that the photo was
framed reasonably well.
RULE OF THIRDS
10. • Manual exposure is mainly the
balancing of the 3 aspects; f-
stop, shutter speed and ISO.
When taking a photograph you
need to consider all of these
aspects to achieve the best
picture possible.
MANUAL EXPOSURE
ISO- 1600
F-stop- 11
Shutter speed- 1/500
F-stop- 8
ISO- 100
Shutter speed- 1/125
F-stop- 16
ISO- 1600
Shutter speed- 1/640