Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Manual Setting

This photo was taken with an f-stop of 13.0 and shutter speed of 1/320. On the day this photo was taken, it was dark outside which had a bit of an affect on the brightness of the photos. This particular photo came out pretty clear and the subject was quite visible.

Here the f-stop was 13.0 and the shutter speed was increased to 1/640. The photo came out much darker than the previous one. There was not enough light to support the speed of the shutter. The image is still clear but the subject is much darker.

In this photo the f-stop was 13.0 and the shutter speed was increased to 1/1250. This photo came out extremely dark because of the fast shutter speed and the lack of natural lighting. The photo did not come out "fuzzy" but the photo is much to dark to see clearly.
These three photos were taken with the same shutter speed but different f-stop settings. This particular photo was taken with an f-stop of 5.0 and a shutter speed of 1/320. The small f-stop created a large aperture or opening in the shutter that allowed light into the shutter. This helped to increase the clarity of the photo and it came out quite nicely.

This photo was taken with an f-stop of 9 and a shutter speed of 1/320. The smaller aperture allowed less light into the photo making it darker than the previous photo and less appealing. This photo did not come out as well because it wasn't as bright.

This photo was taken with an f-stop of 16 and a shutter speed of 1/320. This had an even smaller opening for light and the photo was much darker. This photo did not come out well, it was way too dark and not clear.