Saturday, February 10, 2018

BRACKETING


DATE 2/5




400ISO  35mm(focal length) f/13.1(aperture)   1/30 (shutter speed)Meter at -1



400ISO   35mm(focal length) f/7.1(aperture)  1/60 (shutter speed)Meter at 0



400ISO  35mm(focal length) f/6.3(aperture)   1/125 (shutter speed)Meter +1







Bracketing is the taking of multiple photographs of the same exact scene but adjusting the exposure slightly for each so that in the end you have various exposures to choose from such as a darker, lighter, or one in the middle. It’s used simply to be sure you can get a good exposure from a subject that's hard to meter. The settings you manipulate with to achieve bracketing is the aperture, shutter speed, and the ISO or International Standards Organization which measure sensitivity to light. To achieve a regulated photo the light meter must point in ther center on 0. To achieve an overexposed photo double your light metter +1 and to underexpose half your exposure by -1.

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SIX IMAGES

4/30 (this aren't the final product of the images, I will be cropping and evening some out to look better in my final project) ...