Shutter Speed Projects
- Morgan Guerra

- Sep 10, 2019
- 2 min read
Updated: Oct 1, 2019
These are my favorite photos from our unit of exposure. We took short exposure photos, like the strawberries and milk, as well as long exposure, with the light painting.
Picture light is one of the most significant perspectives to think about when taking a picture. There are thee things that change how light or dark your picture is: Aperture, ISO, and shutter speed. changing these three things accomplishes something other than effect the brightness and darkness. In this post we take a gander at the imaginative outcomes shade speed has on our pictures and how it permits a photographic artist increasingly innovative control.
Shutter speed is the length of time the shutter curtain stays open during a photo. Shutter speed is regularly estimated in fractions of a second. A long exposure (a.k.a slow shutter speed) is the point at which the shutter curtain stays open for more than 1/30 of a second. The shutter speed on early cameras stayed open presenting the plate to light for a significant stretch of time. The earliest images required a shutter speed of around 20 minutes but by the 1840's the time had been reduced to about 20 seconds. We recreated this experience when we stayed still and took long exposure photos.
Today the sensors in our cameras don't require such long exposure times, but long exposures are sometimes still necessary in low light environments.For the same reason we took out long exposure photos we understood the effects of motion blur on long exposure photos. this can lead to creative photos like the light painting and long exposure portraits.
Short exposure (A.k.a Fast Shutter Speed) is useful when there is a lot of light on the place you are taking a photo. The effect of short exposure is freezing action. This is great for taking photos of fast and moving things. You can use this to create photos like the strawberies and milk and the water balloon.


































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