Term
What Does Photography Mean? |
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Definition
- “photos” + “graphos”
from the Greek = “light writing”
- Writing with light
- Drawing with light
- Painting with light |
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Term
What is a Correct Exposure? |
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Definition
the minimum amount of light required to record
adequate shadow and highlight detail
should (normally) resemble the brightness
of the original scene
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Term
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Definition
Exposure is the amount of light collected by the film or digital sensor
in your camera during a single picture. |
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Term
What Does a Light Meter Do? |
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Definition
A light meter measures how much light there is.
It tells us how we should set our camera to ensure that the correct
amount of light strikes the sensor |
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Term
What Does The Light Meter Tell Us? |
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Definition
Depending on the Mode it will tell us -
ISO Mode - What our shutter speed needs to be (how long the aperture needs to be open for)
and how large the aperture needs to be (f-stop)
Aperture Mode - What our shutter speed needs to be (how long the aperture needs to be open for)
and what our ISO needs to be
(the amount of light to let in)
Shutter Speed Mode - What our ISO needs to be (the amount of light to let in)
and what our aperture needs to be (f-stop) |
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Term
What are the Two Types of Light Meters? |
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Definition
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Term
How Does a Light Meter Work For Incident Light Metering? |
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Definition
-measures the strength of the light falling on the
subject
-the meter is “aimed” towards the camera or light
source |
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Term
How Does a Light Meter Work For Reflected Light Metering? |
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Definition
-light is metered as it bounces off the subject
-the meter is “aimed” towards the subject.
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Term
Is Your Camera's Light Meter Reflected or Incident? |
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Definition
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Term
How Much Light Does a Typical Scene Reflect? |
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Definition
18%
Your camera is calibrated to this.
A typical grey card. |
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Term
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Definition
It is the amount of grey reflected back when light falls on it's surface.
Represents the middle between the blackest recordable black and the whitest recordable white.
Approximately 3.5 stops from black and 3.5 stops from white.
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Term
How Do You Read An Internal Light Meter? |
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Definition
Proper exposure is lining up the bar to hightlight under
the reversed triangle.
It show’s how many stops you can be over or under
exposed.
It’s a good scale to use, because when you want to over
ride your light meter’s measurements by a certain
amount of light, you know how much you can dial in or
out.
[image] |
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Term
What are the Criteria for "Good" Exposure? |
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Definition
1. Sensor “Speed” or sensitivity - ISO (ASA/DIN)
2. Aperture - f/stop
3. Time - shutter speed |
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Term
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Definition
How sensitive to light your film or
sensor is. |
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Term
What is Aperture (F-Stops)? |
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Definition
Opening that
allows
how much light gets into your camera and
onto your film/sensor. |
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Term
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Definition
Controls the time, how
long the aperture will stay open to allow
light in. |
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Term
What do ISO, Shutter Speed and Aperture Control/Affect in Exposure? |
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Definition
ISO - Grain
Aperture - DoF (Depth of Field)
Shutter Speed - Blur
[image] |
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Term
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Definition
100, 200, 400, 800, 1600, 3200, 6400, 12800, 25600… |
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Term
What Do Higher ISO Numbers Mean? |
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Definition
The higher the ISO setting (number), the MORE sensitive the image sensor or
film are to light. The “less” light is needed for an exposure.
Higher ISO settings are generally used in darker situations to get faster
shutter speeds (for example an indoor sports event when you want to freeze
the action in lower light) |
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Term
How Do Higher ISO Numbers Affect An Image? |
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Definition
Depending on how “fast” of an ISO you are using,
meaning a higher number, this will affect the final quality of your image.
A
higher ISO, ie: ISO 3200, will have larger visible “noise” or “grain”. |
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Term
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Definition
It’s a photographers term to describe
the amount of light ... or the exposure
value
- ISO 100 will record 1 stop less light
than ISO 200
- a shutter speed of 1/125s will record 1
stop more light than 1/250s
- an aperture of f5.6 will record one stop
less light than f4 |
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Term
How Many Clicks Between ISO Stops? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the Aperture in Your Camera? |
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Definition
An iris composed of thin, sliding, interlocking metal plates.
As you close the iris down to a smaller aperture, it stops more light from passing through to the image sensor.
The size of the aperture is measured in stops or
f-stops. |
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Term
What Does A Higer F-Stop Number Mean? |
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Definition
The higher the f-stop rating, the smaller the opening and the more light your aperture is “stopping”. |
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Term
What Does A Smaller F-Stop Number Mean? |
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Definition
The smaller the number (larger the opening) the more light will illuminate your scene. |
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Term
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Definition
A lens set on f8 has a smaller
aperture than a lens set on f4.
In other words, f8 stops more
light than f4. |
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Term
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Definition
1, 1.4, 2, 2.8, 4, 5.6, 8, 11, 16, 22, 32, 45, 64 |
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Term
What is the Common Factor Between F-Stops? |
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Definition
The common factor is the root of 2
between each stop (approx. 1.4)
F-Stops double at every other full stop in
either direction |
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Term
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Definition
A histogram displays all the tones in an image.
It can show if an image has clipped highlights or shadows. |
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Term
What Does a Well Exposed Histogram Look Like? |
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Definition
The light range often looks like a mountain peak. The exposure is correct as neither the shadows nor highlights are clipped.
[image] |
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Term
What Does an Underexposed Histogram Look Like? |
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Definition
The majority of the peaks of the histogram are on the left (shadows) side. This means there is lost data that can not be retrieved.
[image] |
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Term
What Does an Overexposed Histogram Look Like? |
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Definition
The majority of the peaks are on the right side (highlights) of the histogram. This means there are clipped highlights and lost data.
[image] |
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Term
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Definition
The relationship between the intensity of the
light and duration of the exposure that result
in identical exposure.
In other words, when an adjustment is made in your exposure settings, the same exposure can be achieved by changing one of the other exposure settings the opposite amount... i.e.
f-8 @ 1/30th
is the same as
f-5.6 @ 1/60th
[image] |
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Term
ISO 100, f-16 @ 1/60th
is the same as? |
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Definition
ISO 400, f-16 @ 1/250th
[image] |
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Term
What are the F-#'s (Numbers)? |
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Definition
Defined as the ratio of focal length to
lens diameter.
f# (or stop) = F(lens focal length)/D(lens diameter)
f8 always passes the same volume of light to the sensor no matter what lens or camera format. |
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Term
Small Number in F-Stops Means? |
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Definition
Bigger Hole, Wider Aperture, More Light |
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Term
Large Number in F-Stop Means? |
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Definition
Small Hole, Narrow Aperture, Less Light |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Depth of field is the part of a scene that
appears acceptably sharp in a photograph.
[image] |
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Term
What is the Sunny F16 Rule? |
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Definition
On a bright sunny day, with camera
aperture set to f16, the shutter speed
will be 1 over the ISO value
I.E.
f/16, ISO 200, 1/250 (250 is the closest) |
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Term
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Definition
The distance from the lens to the focal plane
when the lens is focused on infinity.
[image] |
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Term
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Definition
It is where your sensor is located.
[image] |
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Term
What Does Focusing on Infinity Mean? |
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Definition
It means your lens is focused so an infinitely-distant object would be sharp.
When an object is infinitely far away, the rays of light coming from it are, in theory, parallel.
A lens set at infinity focus is set so that theoretical object would be in focus.
[image]
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Term
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Definition
The angle subtended at the lens by
the diagonal of the camera format when focused at
infinity.
(Subtend is the point where 2 lines meet to form an angle)
[image] |
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Term
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Definition
The name given to electromagnetic radiation that can evoke a human visual response. |
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Term
What is the Visible Spectrum of Light? |
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Definition
Visible wavelengths range from approx.
400nm(violet) to 700nm(red/infrared)
[image] |
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Term
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Definition
When the light waves are vibrating along a single plane.
How they look after entering a polarizing filter.
[image] |
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Term
What is Unpolarized Light? |
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Definition
Random orientations of light. Not just vibrating up and
down, but also left to right, and everything in
between. |
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Term
How Can Light Become Polarized? |
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Definition
1. A clear blue sky and you camera is aimed at a 90 degree angle to the sun.
2. Reflective surfaces that are non-metallic such as water, glass and plastic.
(Maximum effect when approximately 35 degrees to the glass)
3. Natural Crystals such as tourmaline. |
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Term
What Are 2 Types of Polarizing Filters? |
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Definition
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