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K1NGJAY23

Posted on May 2, 2024

COMMENTS ON BLOGS OF PEERS

Posted on April 26, 2024

10 PHOTOGRAPHY TIPS

Posted on April 25, 2024

BARBARA KRUGER STYLE

Posted on April 25, 2024

MAGAZINE COVER

Posted on April 23, 2024

POEM AND PHOTOGRAPHY

Posted on April 19, 2024April 23, 2024

LETTER TO NEXT YEARS PHOTO STUDENTS

Posted on April 19, 2024

 SURREALISTIC COLLAGE

Posted on April 17, 2024

BUYING A DIGITAL CAMERA

Posted on April 12, 2024

MIRROR IMAGERY

Posted on April 11, 2024April 11, 2024

ALBUM COVER

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Recent Posts

  • COMMENTS ON BLOGS OF PEERS
  • 10 PHOTOGRAPHY TIPS
  • BARBARA KRUGER STYLE
  • MAGAZINE COVER
  • POEM AND PHOTOGRAPHY

About me

Wsg yall welcome to my blog for period 3 my name is Jayden, but you can call me Jay if you want couple things Abt me, I'm 16 years old I play football for JHHS and I play lots of basketball and I like listening to music and I like to drive.

What I learned in Digital photography and camera exposure.

To achieve camera exposure, you need to use the three things that control it. The three things are aperture, shutter speed, and ISO which form the “exposure triangle”. The aperture controls the area over which light enters into the camera. It’s described in a f-stop value. The higher the value, the smaller the hole around the lens which lets less light in that is used for brighter areas. The smaller the hole around the lens lets more lights in for darker areas. The shutter speed controls the period of time of exposure. With faster shutter speed, less light is let into the camera. Faster shutter speed is used for more powerful freezing of an image. Slow shutter speed is used to catch a more exaggerating appearance of motion in an image. Iso speed determines how sensitive the camera is to incoming light. Low ISO speed produces lower image noise. High ISO speeds can dramatically increase image noise making photos blurrier and more pixelated. There are many camera modes, but manual mode is what I’m using most. Manual mode is where you control everything, the aperture, shutter speed, and ISO speed.

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