Friday, 11 October 2013

Third Photography Session





For these images, I changed the shutter speed setting to 15 seconds. This enabled the camera to absorb enough light to capture the movement of my model on the spinning chair, and then the movement of myself spinning on the chair holding the camera. The camera shutter stayed open so long that it absorbed a lot of light and therefore movement, creating a motion blur in the image.

These images were taken with the shutter speed at a very high shutter speed. As it was so fast, the camera was able to capture the motion of the spinning chair with very little blur. However, the camera was unable to absorb very much light in this time, and the image appears dark. To capture an image properly at this high shutter speed, you would need somewhere with a lot of light, such as a studio.

These images were captured with the shutter speed of 1/500. This was to capture the motion of my model jumping in midair with minimal blur - 'freezing' her in time. 



These images were also taken at 1/500. In order to get a sequence of photographs of my model running, my shutter speed had to be set high due to how fast she was running. 




Like the above images, these are also running shots taken with the shutter speed set at 1/500. There is little motion blur in these images, as the images were captured so quickly.

This image captured the motion of leaves as they were thrown into the air. I set the shutter speed at 1/250 in order to get a small amount of motion blur to show movement - however, this isn't visible in the photographs. In the future, I would set the shutter speed a bit slower so that I am able to capture the motion blur.

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