aperture- f2.8
aperture- f16
- the part of the body most closely related to aperture is the pupil they both get bigger or smaller to take in light
- the smaller the aperture the bigger the f stop, the higher the aperture the smaller the f stop
- a higher f stop makes the background and foreground more clear whereas a low f stop blurs out most everything except the subject
high shutter speed
low shutter speed
- in the light : A.) low shutter speed B.) low shutter speed C.) high shutter speed D.) low shutter speed E.) high shutter speed F.) high shutter speed in the dark: A.) high shutter speed B.) high shutter speed C.) slow shutter speed D.) high shutter speed E.) high shutter speed F.) slow shutter speed
- there are 3 setting regarding shutter speed, aperture priority which lets you set the aperture and automatically does shutter speed for you, shutter priority which does the exact opposite it lets you set shutter speed and takes care of aperture for you, and manual which lets you set both
iso 200
iso 3200
- some advantages would be not having to use the flash in a darker area and the photos are taken quicker
- the author suggested to use low iso as much as you can until its not possible anymore and when there is lots of light
- he said you should use high iso when there is no enough light to capture good images fast
- aperture settings: you can adjust the f stop and change the
- shutter speeds: you can change the shutter speeds
- you can go from very low iso to very high iso
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