Shutter speed
In photography, shutter speed (or exposure time) is the length of time when the film or digital sensor inside the camera is exposed to light, also when a camera's shutter is open when taking a photo. The amount of light that reaches the film or image sensor is proportional to the exposure time. shutter speed affects image sharpness while on the other hand slow shutter speed makes the image blurry, but usually its not the case, but most of the time it will not be the same as if the shutter speed was somewhat faster. Down below are my own examples of the shutter speed thingy-ma-bob.
As you can see, the cars above are blurry. This is because I have set the camera to a low shutter speed which made the camera take photos a little slower than usual, and any movement is allowed to be taken in to the lens itself. The effect of this results in a cool teleport-like effect, and that is how we capture the movement of objects.
To the golden cat on the right, I took two pictures, one normal and one slowed down. In one of the cat images, the hand is still, while on the other one, the hand is caught moving. Personally, I really like the golden cat image. The mini waterfall (really small waterfall) can be seen very differently, the waterfall on the top is a lot clearer and less blurrier (whatever how you say it), the image is stopped and the water can be seen in droplets. The other image is let to flow and only can be seen in a blurry flow. |
ISO (International Standards Organisation)
The ISO is a standardized industry scale for measuring the sensitivity of light. it can be related to how sensitive a camera film is to light. To me, the ISO makes the light get captured like normally, but the light rays are super effective. So a weaker light ray reflects a lot more than it should, so therefore the lens are a lot more sensitive. Here are a lot of my own examples of the ISO, going from the highest to the lowest setting.
I swear! I was not lazy!! The image box started breaking as I was placing them!! But anyway, you can clearly see that the images started to get somewhat clearer, and the last one was one that I got at the lowest ISO setting, BUT I SWEAR I AM NOT LAZY!!
Aperture
The aperture in Photography is most relatable to the pupil in the normal human eye. Depending on how much light there is, the iris ( which is a hole that lets light further into the eye) shrinks or expands to let the most or least possible light into the eye. the more light that enters the eye, the smaller the iris would be, while on the other hand, the less light there is, the bigger the iris would be because it wants as much light in as it can. aperture affects the depth of field, or the sharpness of an image. Once again, down below are some of my own examples.
The Exposure Triangle
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