Shutterspeed
Photo one has a fast shutter speed. It has a shutter speed of 1/1000 sec. This photo has an ISO of 20 and the white balance was sunny. I froze the action of my little sister jumping off a patio that is 4 feet high. My distance from the photo was that I was about four feet below her when she jumped. I was also practically right underneath her but slightly to the side so she wouldn't jump on me. My point of view was right underneath her so it looked as if she was jumping on to the camera. This photo follows the rule of thirds because her feet and arms are along the grid lines for the rule of thirds.
Photo six has a slow shutter speed. It has a shutter speed of 1/20 sec. This photo has an ISO of 100 and the white balance was sunny. In the image, an umbrella was being spun and that motion was blurred. A person held it behind her and starting to spin it fast. My distance was a few feet away from the umbrella and my point of view was head on. I was looking directly at it. Shape is involved in this photo because as the umbrella was spun, it made a circle shape. This photo also follows the rule of thirds because the top part of the umbrella is on the upper right point on the rule of thirds grid. Also, the line on the umbrella that is extending from the top point of the umbrella to the left is on a rule of thirds line.
Photo six has a slow shutter speed. It has a shutter speed of 1/20 sec. This photo has an ISO of 100 and the white balance was sunny. In the image, an umbrella was being spun and that motion was blurred. A person held it behind her and starting to spin it fast. My distance was a few feet away from the umbrella and my point of view was head on. I was looking directly at it. Shape is involved in this photo because as the umbrella was spun, it made a circle shape. This photo also follows the rule of thirds because the top part of the umbrella is on the upper right point on the rule of thirds grid. Also, the line on the umbrella that is extending from the top point of the umbrella to the left is on a rule of thirds line.
Painting With Light
In photo 3, the shutterspeed was 4.0 sec. The light source I used was a rod that had 6 bright lights in a row on it. I achieved the image/effect by moving it to form a star shape. Then I went into photoshop under hue to add a blue tint with a little bit of pink. The impact the photo has is that it looks like a star. Their eyes will probably start at the center where the star beings and then the will follow the lines and the path of the star as the lines turn all the way to the end. The viewer would probably feel happy or interested because it is a star and their eyes will have many paths to follow and the colors are light colors so it provides a happy/nice mood, compared to dark colors.
Just for Fun
Aperture
Homework
Color Correcting
Photo 2 has a shallow depth of field. It has an f-stop of 5.3. It has an ISO of 800. The white balance was on fluorescent light. Photo 1 has a large depth of field. It has an f-stop of 22. It has an ISO of 800. Thw white balance was on fluorescent light. Photo 2 is better. It is because it has a shallow depth of field so the photo feels and looks more dynamic. The image looks like it has more layers. You would want to use a shallow depth of field to dramatize the image. A shallow depth of field makes the image look more dynamic and it adds layers to the picture. You would use a large depth of field in a situation when you wanted all aspects and objects in the image to be in focus. This way, all parts of the image can be clearly seen.