Monday, April 20, 2009

Class

Sixty film speed, which was OK, but the shutter speed to slow. Makes it a little washed out. The flame did show however, which was what I was trying to accomplish. Anothe picture of trying to catch the flame in the photo. The first tries were to light and did not reflect the brightness of the flame. This picture was using 400 film speed and it was to fast. Not enough light.




This picture is unique in that it was taken with the "night shot" feature of my camera. It was taken at 11:oo pm with no flash and no lights on in the area. It works great for filming wildlife at night, campsite scenes without using a flash. It uses infrared technology. The following images are tests using different settings to produce different results of shading, lighting, shadows, etc. The top picture was done in bright sunlight with the film speed of 160 and OVE of .7. It was to much light.




The setting for the frog was film speed 800 and F stop of 3.5. Notice the shadows from the lesser light.





This frog was shot at film speed 30 and Fs-5. It lightened up the picture for a different effect. Less shadow and more detail.





The vase was photographed at a film speed of 30 and Fs-4.0. It shows more detail in the picture such as the second vase in the background and outside the window.





I then went to a film speed of 160 and fs of 2.7 for the shadow effect that draws your eye to the vase.