Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Single Portraits

For these photos we were attempting Rembrandt Lighting
Blue backdrop with white fish netting
All taken at 1/60, 1250 ISO
5.6>6.3>7.1>5.0>4.5








For these photos we attempted Hollywood lighting.
Silver backdrop used. We tried to create a shadow under the nose without touching the lips.
All taken at 1/60, 200 ISO
5.6>6.3>7.1>5.0>4.5
We thought the best reading was 5.6








Photos all taken at 1/60, 200ISO
Tin background, these photos were taken to capture a softer look
6.3>5.6>5.0>,4.0
Best reading was 4.0







For these photos we attempted short lighting
Purple backdrop with lighting positioned to make the face look thinner.
All at 1/60, 200 ISO
5.6>6.3>7.1>5.0>4.5
We thought the best reading was 5.6





Workshop 1- Exposure


Tv 1/30, Av 8, ISO 200, Lens 18mm, Auto Av
Face is pale, little detail in building poster











Tv 1/30, Av 8, ISO 200, Lens 18mm, Lightmeter
Very much the same as above











Tv 1/30, Av 7.1, ISO 200, Lens 18mm+1/3
Darker background- greys are dark












Tv 1/30, Av 6.3, ISO 200, Lens 18mm+2/3
Sheet is much darker, pastel paper changing













Tv 1/30, Av 5.6, ISO 200, Lens 18mm+1
Lost detail in everything but blacks











Tv 1/30, Av 4, ISO 200, Lens 18mm+2
Very over exposed, lost all detail










Tv 1/30, Av 9, ISO 200, Lens 18mm-1/3
Whiteboard slightly grey











TV 1/30, Av 10, ISO 200, Lens 18mm-2/3
Underexposed












Tv 1/30, Av 11, ISO 200, Lens 18mm-1
Underexposed, good detail in white picture












Tv 1/30, Av 16, ISO 200, Lens 18mm-2
No detail at all, underexposed















Changing the aperture effects how much light enters the camera. Each full f-number change represents a halving or doubling of light
F16- is underexposed and the image has lost all detail in the shadow areas and is very dark.
F4- is overexposed and light has been recorded in the lightest parts of the image
I preferably like the darker shadows that come through when the f-number is set on 7.1