Aperture, shutter, speed, and ISO
Aperture
F/2.8
F/16
- The eyes is what we closely relate to the aperture.
- The smaller the aperture, the more visible. the larger the aperture, the smaller the area is focused.
- The aperture impacts on the depth of field by blurring the background of the object that is sharp.
Speed shutter
High shutter speed
Low shutter speed
DAY
A. slow shutter speed
B. Slow shutter speed
C. Fast shutter speed
D. Fast shutter speed
E. slow shutter speed
F. Fast shutter speed
NIGHT
A. Fast shutter speed
B. Fast shutter speed
C. Slow shutter speed
D. Slow shutter speed
E. Fast shutter speed
F. Slow shutter speed
- When you set it to Auto mode it turns it to shutter speed and aperture on by itself.
- When you set it to aperture priority you have to set the lens to aperture but the camera dose speed shutter.
- When you have it on manual you have to set aperture and speed shutter on your own.
Iso
- The advantage of a higher Iso at a sporting event is the players will be more focused and not blurry because of their motion.
- The advice the author gave us is to use the lowest Iso (100-200) to get a higher quality.
- The advice the author gave us about the higher Iso is to only use it when its dark outside.
Aperture setting: F2.8-F22
Shutter speed setting: 1 sec-1/4000 sec
Iso setting: 100-25600
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