the camera and exposure. slr vs. range finder cameras

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The Camera and Exposure

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Page 1: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

The Camera and Exposure

Page 2: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Page 3: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

SLR – Single Lens Reflex What You See is What You Get

In the SLR camera both the image previewed and the image captured are identical

The SRL camera has only one optical path, and it is into the lens

Page 4: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

It is inside the SRL camera where the image is diverted

between the preview and captured modes. A hinged

mirror is the diverting mechanism. In the preview

mode, the mirror reflects the light up into a prism and out

the preview window

When the shutter is activated the mirror "pops up", and the

light is diverted into the image recording-medium

Page 5: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Basic Camera Operations

Page 6: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Keeping Your Lens Clean

Page 7: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Dirty Mirror inside your SLR

Page 8: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Don’t touch the Shutter Blades

Page 9: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Camera Cleaning Tools

Page 10: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Exposure is a term that is used to express how much light

impacts the film

f-stop (aperture) and Shutter Speed are Exposure Combinations

Page 11: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Light and the Shutter Speed:

To expose film correctly, so that your picture is neither too light nor too dark, you need to control the amount of light

that reaches the film.

In manual operation, you control both the shutter speed and the aperture (f/stop)

opening.

Page 12: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Shutter Speed

Small aperture, slow shutter

f/16 1/8

Medium aperture, medium shutter speed

f/4 1/60

Larger aperture, fast shutter speed

f/2 1/500

Page 13: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Aperture: Size of Lens Opening

• Controls the brightness of the light that reaches film – like the pupil of an eye

• Size indicated by f-stop• Largest admits most light• Each stop after admits half

the light of previous onei.e. f/4 half as much as f/2.8

Page 14: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Aperturef/2.8 f/4 f/5.6 f/8 f/11 f/16 f/22

• Aperture/F-stop• Bigger f-stop number, the

smaller the lens opening and the less light that is let in. As the number gets bigger (4, 5.6, 8), the aperture size gets smaller and the amount of light admitted decreases.

Page 15: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Depth of FieldDepth of field is a phrase that defines a measure of distance that spans a distance ahead of and behind a subject focused on; and, within that distance the image is fairly sharp. The distance ahead of and behind the subject is not equal. Generally

the distance ahead of the subject is 1/3 of the depth of field range. This is illustrated in Figure 5.1. The depth of field is shown in color. The red line represents the subject

and at the bottom is the camera location.

Page 16: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

The two images have the same exposure but with radically different combinations of shutter speed and f-

stop. Which exposure combination is producing the largest depth of field?

• f4 @ 1/125 sec

• f16 @ 1/8 sec

• 1/125 sec f/4 (Figure 6.2)• 1/ 60  sec f/5.6

1/ 30 sec f/8• 1/ 15 sec f/11

• 1/ 8  sec f/16  (Figure 6.1)

Page 17: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Aperture and Depth of Field:“Shallow”

• f/2 and lens focused on boy (b) in middle – about seven feet away from photographer

Page 18: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Aperture and Depth of Field:“Deep/Wide”

• f/16 and lens focused on boy (b) in middle – about seven feet away from photographer

Page 19: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras
Page 20: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Shutter Speed

The amount of time the shutter remains open

Page 21: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Shutter Speed: Length of time light reaches film

• The faster the shutter speed, the more likely a moving subject will be sharp. i.e. 1/125 or 1/250

Page 22: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Shutter Speed: Fast

1/250, 1/500, 1/1000, 1/2000,…

Page 23: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

©Alan Sailer

Page 24: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

©Alan Sailer

Page 25: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Image by Diego Diaz

Page 26: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Adam Panczuk, Images from In the Rhythm of the Land

Page 27: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Adam Panczuk, Images from In the Rhythm of the Land

Page 28: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Shutter Speed: Slow

Camera is steady during this slow exposure, i.e. 1/30 or 1/15

Page 29: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

http://www.flickr.com/photos/alphageek/806224397/

Page 30: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Image by Ondra Soukup

Page 31: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Image by Dean Ayres

Page 32: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Image by Mikel

Page 33: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Adam Panczuk, Images from In the Rhythm of the Land

Page 34: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Alexy Titarenko, from the project City of Shadows

Page 35: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Alexy Titarenko, from the project City of Shadows

Page 36: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Alexy Titarenko, from the project City of Shadows

Page 37: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Alexy Titarenko, from the project City of Shadows

Page 38: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Panning

Both the subject and the camera were moving on a slow shutter speed, i.e. 1/15, 1/30, 1/60 – “panning”

Rule of thumb: the faster your subjects are moving, the faster you use the shutter, i.e. 1/100

Page 39: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Photo by fabbriciuse

Page 40: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Photo by Flash Parker

Page 41: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

http://dvphotogroup.blogspot.com/

Page 42: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

How to Pan

*Select Low shutter speed

*Track your subject

*Best to be parallel with subject

*Press shutter down to take the picture

*You might need to pre-focus and make sure your subject stays in the right area of the shot

*Press shutter speed as smoothly as possible and follow your subject through even after you take the picture to make sure there is no motion blur

http://dvphotogroup.blogspot.com/

Page 43: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Some example images using minimum and maximum depth of field and slow shutter

Page 44: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras
Page 45: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras
Page 46: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Linda Butler

Page 47: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Linda Butler

Page 48: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Linda Butler

Page 49: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Linda Butler

Page 50: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Ralph Eugene Meatyard

Page 51: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Ralph Eugene Meatyard

Page 52: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Ralph Eugene Meatyard

Page 53: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Ralph Eugene Meatyard

Page 54: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Ralph Eugene Meatyard

Page 55: The Camera and Exposure. SLR vs. Range Finder Cameras

Ralph Eugene Meatyard