1/13 1/30 1/60 1/100 I took a picture of Henry waving adjusted the Shutter speed so that his hand stood still which was a low shutter speed but when I adjusted it to a higher shutter speed his hand stood still more often. f3.5 f5 f6.3 f8 Here I took a picture of markers trying to adjust the depth of field using aperture. I tried to deepen the depth of field with a higher aperture and make the depth of field shallower with a lower number. A faster shutter speed stops almost all motion blur and less light.
A slow shutter speed allows you to see movement in the image more light. A larger and more open aperture grants a deep depth of field and less light. A smaller more closed aperture gives you a shallow depth of field and more light.
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I chose these images because I believe they framed the animals well for the photo and that will probably be one of the biggest struggles for me when I take my photos for Animals.
I'm Joey Graves I'm a freshmen at SHS and my family includes my mom, my dad, and personal demon that sets out to ruin everything I enjoy in life, or my sister Hannah. I believe I only have 1 year of photography experience from a multimedia class.
For this assignment we were instructed to learn about 11 of the many composition techniques practice them and then post our favorite example photos to a blog we designed. BalanceThis image represents Balance because when I originally took the picture I realized it could be many things (Rule of Thirds, Leaving Space, etc.). But I believe it fit best with balance because of the way I captured the flag in the wind BALANCING the image. ColorThis Image represents Colors because when I initially took the photo I was going to use it for Rule of Thirds but I then thought to myself, "Wait Colors." So here we are. Depth of FieldI chose this Image for Depth of Field because it shows deep depth of field where the entire image is in view. I also added some lens flare coming from the windows at the end of the hallway. FramingThis photo represents Framing because well I framed the guy in the middle the best I could. (Stupid metal bar tried to ruin my photo.) LinesPatternPerspectiveRule of ThirdsSpacingSymmetryTextureDuring This project I learned a lot more about the 11 composition techniques I personally enjoyed taking pictures of the Rule of Thirds composition technique because I enjoyed how most of the pictures turned out. The only thing I didn't like was the notes but that was mostly because I've taken a photography class before and I already knew most of the stuff it was talking about.
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