Fig 1 |
This exercise i focused on the camera set at different apertures to demonstrate depth of field. By standing right in front of a set of christmas trees arranged in a row in front of my house, i demonstrated depth of field. The picture in Fig 1 above was taken with this exif data: shutter speed 1/250s, aperture f 4.8, ISO 800 ,Focal length 75mm. This was the widest aperture obtained with shutter speed of 1/250 secs.As can be seen the fore ground is very sharp and the background is blurred.
Fig 2 |
Fig 3 |
Bryan Peterson in his book understanding exposures says the three components of exposure ;ISO,shutter speed and aperture can be broken down to get seven different types of exposure and its either the aperture or shutter speed most often behind the success of a creative exposure. Small apertures (f16,f22,f32) he calls storytelling exposures that show great depth of field while larger apertures (f2.8 f/4 f5.6) are the creative forces behind singular theme or isolation exposures. The middle of the ground apertures f/8 and f/11 are apertures in which depth of field is of no concern.
This i tried to visualise myself. If i close my eyes slightly, i observe that the object closer to me is sharper than that further away from me. Thats aperture!
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