Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Manual Focus (same f-stop)

For the photos in these posts, I played around with the shutter speed and left the aperture the same. This means the speed in which the photo was being taken would change and the opening would change the same.
 The shutter speed for this photo was 1/400 which was actually pretty slow. This is why the photo is really bright. The slow shutter speed allowed for more light to come in. A slow shutter speed means a brighter photo.

 As for this photo, the shutter 1/640 which is slightly faster than the previous one. It allows a lot of light to come in as well which is why its look really white and bright.
The shutter speed for this photo is 1/4000 which is actually really fast. Its actually the fastest the camera will go. This is why even though the photo is still bright its better than the other two above.

Manual Focus (same shutter speed)

For this post I got to work with the manual focus on the mode dial. For these photos I kept the shutter speed the same and played around with the aperture. For each photo I kept the shutter speed at 1/1000.
 As for this top photo the f-stop was 5.6 This made the shot brighter because it caused more light to come in. As a matter of fact it was too bright of a photo.

 For this photograph the f-stop was 25.0 This photo came up to be darker than the other because less light was allowed in. As mentioned before the shutter speed was the same for all three photos.

The f-stop for this one is 32.0 for this photo. Naturally this means a lot less light was allowed to go through which is the reason for it to be very dark. Because the Shutter speed is fast and the aperture is high that means its given less time to let light in and the opening is small.