Transcript of Photography ppt
- 1. ASSIGNMENT PHOTOGRAPHY Manvika Agrawal MBA Media Management
2nd semester
- 2. DEFINE PHOTOGRAPHY,TYPES OF PHOTOGRAPHY DEFINE APERTURE
& SHUTTER SPEED DRAW OF A SHORT OF COMBINATION OF APERTURE
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- 3. Introduction to Photography
- 4. Photography is Art created by Light!
- 5. PHOTOGRAPHY
- 6. Landscape Portrait Documentary
- 7. Landscape is a photograph of the environment. It could be
the forest, mountains, oceans, or your backyard. Ansell Adams is a
famous landscape photographer. Here is one of his images.
- 8. Landscape photography is a photography of the outdoors It
could be of the land, water, or buildings.
- 9. PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHY Portrait photography is a photo of a
person or animal. It is important to show an emotion. What is the
emotion shown in this PHOTO? Scared Angry
- 10. Documentary Documentary photography presents facts without
changing anything. Good documentary photographs make you wonder
what the story is behind the photograph.
- 11. NEW PAPER MAGAZINES BOOKS INTERNET
- 12. The shutter blocks all light from exposing the film UNTIL
you press the button. Then it quickly opens and closes, giving the
film a brief flash of light. You can control the length of time the
shutter remains open by setting the SHUTTER SPEED. Longer shutter
speeds = more light shorter shutter speeds = less light
- 13. Before light reaches film, it must pass through an opening
called an "Aperture". The aperture is like a pupil. You can control
the aperture by setting the "Aperture Opening", also known as an
F-Stop. Smaller F-stops numbers = larger openings larger openings =
more light
- 14. The longer exposures ( like 1 second ) give much more light
to the film than a 1/1000 of a second exposure. So even though the
number may look bigger, don't be deceived! Examples: A half second
exposure is ONE STOP darker than a one second exposure. A 1/125
exposure is TWO STOPS brighter than a 1/500 exposure. A 1/1000
exposure is THREE STOPS darker than a 1/125 exposure
- 15. Like the pupil in a human eye, the aperture on a camera
controls light. It does so by closing up to restrict light, and
opening up to let it through. Examples: moving from f16 to f8 is:
TWO STOPS brighter. moving from f5.6 to f8 is: ONE STOP darker
moving from f4 to f2.8 is: ONE STOP brighter
- 16. Exposure is about different combinations of shutter and
f-stop settings. These combinations can drastically affect the
finished picture. For example, the following three pictures have
been given an equal amount of light, but the f-stop and shutter
combinations make each one unique
- 17. Exposure is a combination of two fundamental camera
settings - aperture diameter and shutter speed. Many combinations
will give the right exposure, but each will have differences is
depth of field, motion blur, and so on. This interplay of different
factors can seem complicated, and people can be put off learning
about exposure altogether, opting instead to use their camera's
automatic mode to do the work for them.
- 18. Shutter speed is simply a measure of how long the camera's
shutter is open for. It typically ranges from anywhere around
1/1000th of a second (a fast shutter speed or short exposure time)
to several seconds (a slow shutter speed or long exposure time).
Shutter Speed
- 19. MANVIKA