The image I am going to talk about the second image. The shutter speed I used to freeze the action was 1.2 seconds. The ISO I used was 800 and the WB was fluorescent. I blurred the action of Maddy with her arms out moving from bending down to standing up with her hands by her side. My distance was 4 feet away and the point of view was straight on. I believe this photo follows the rule of thirds because Maddy's body is placed in the corner of the photo.
Fast Shutterspeed
The image I am going to talk about is the first image. The shutter speed of the image was 1/12 seconds. The ISO I used was 400 and the WB was fluorescent. The action I froze was Maddy spinning a rainbow colored circle infront of her eyes. My distance was 2 feet away and my point of view was straight on. I believe this image has strong color with the rainbow on the circle and the red that stands out on Maddy's jacket. I also feel the shape of the circle is strong and sharp because it shows the crisp edges of the circle.
Homework (slow shutterspeed)
Painting With Light
My first image in my gallery was created with a rainbow string of lights. My camera's shutter speed was on 2. The way I achieved this effect was having two people swing the string of lights around, creating the tunnel effect. A viewer would have the effect that the light was moving in a circular direction with many different colors, almost like a jump rope moving around.
Aperture
The first image is in shallow depth of field. The f-stop was f/2.8. The ISO was 800 and the WB was fluorescent. The fifth image is in a large depth of field. The f-stop was f/16. The ISO was 800 and the WB was fluorescent. The fifth image is better because it has better color and more contrasting parts of the image such as the glass, rose, and cup. I would want to use a shallow depth of field to capture one specific part of a scene instead of focusing on it as a whole. A large depth of field would be better when trying to capture the whole scene instead of keeping one part in focus rather than the other.