Read and writes

 

 

Tue, Sept 6

I will be able to be my own boss, working or being a freelance photographer allows you the freedom to dictate everything about your business: your public image, your brand, your calendar, your marketability, your clients, the list is endless.  when photographing there is no right or wrong answer you just do what makes you happy. It’s all subjective and, within reason, nobody can really tell you to stop doing what you’re doing.

 

 

 

 

 

 

  1. What are aperture, shutter speed and ISO?  “The aperture controls the area over which light can enter your camera. The Shutter speed controls the duration of the exposure. The ISO speed controls the sensitivity of your camera’s sensor to a given amount of light.”
  2. When would you need to change your ISO? “You should change your ISO depending one lighting.”
  3. What is aperture and shutter priority settings? “Aperture priority lets you choose the aperture but the camera choses the shutter speed. Shutter speed lets you choose the shutter speed but the camera chooses the aperture setting”
  4. What are AF modes how do you change them? “you set the lens to AF mode.”
  5. Why do your need to meter the light to get the right exposure? “you need to meter the light to get the right exposer because it will give you a constant exposure.”
  6. What is white balance and why would you need to change it? “White balance removes unrealistic color cast, you would need to change it because the object can appear a different color in the picture”
  7. What is depth of field and what is the difference between shallow and good? “Depth of field is the area of acceptable sharpness in front of and behind the subject which the lens is focused. Shallow puts a small object into focus.”
  8.  What are drive modes and metering modes? “Center-weighted average metering; spot and partial metering; and evaluative, pattern, or matrix metering.”
  9. What is exposure compensation? “Exposure Compensation allows photographers to override exposure settings picked by camera’s light meter, in order to darken or brighten images before they are captured.”