Gallery Research Pages
Manual camera
Fast Shutter Speed
Long Exposure
ISO
ISO- It stands for International Standards Organization, is the light sensitivity rating of a digital image sensor. ISO is one of the three pillars that control exposure on your camera. As you increase the ISO, the sensor becomes more sensitive to light, which allows it to capture more light without slowing down the shutter speed or opening up your aperture. Each time you double your ISO number (like from ISO400 to ISO800), the sensor becomes twice as sensitive to light and therefore require only half as much light to attain the correct exposure. Each camera has a “base ISO,” which is the minimum ISO rating that will provide the cleanest image for that camera.
Aperture- It is the opening in a lens through which light passes to enter the camera. In photography, the “pupil” of your lens is called aperture. You can shrink or enlarge the size of the aperture to allow more or less light to reach your camera sensor. Aperture can add dimension to your photos by controlling depth of field. Aperture gives you a blurred background with a beautiful shallow focus effect. It also gives you sharp photos from the nearby foreground to the distant horizon and it also alters the exposure of your images by making them brighter or darker. A large aperture will pass a lot of light, resulting in a brighter photograph. A small aperture does just the opposite, making a photo darker.
Aperture
Shutter Speed
Shutter speed- It is responsible for changing the brightness of your photo, and creating dramatic effects by either freezing action or blurring motion. Shutter speed is the length of time camera shutter is open, exposing light onto the camera sensor. If your shutter speed is long, moving subjects in your photo will appear blurred along the direction of motion.