My picture is a black and white photo of a vintage/classic car. I titled my picture “Classical Day” because it’s a classic car parked with the sun in the back on a normal day. It was taken in vista right in front of Panera and the transit center. I took this picture with my iPhone SE with no filters, except for the black and white one I put on in iPhoto.
I like this picture because I really like classical cars and also because I like how the sun came upon the car. It was a successful photograph because it came out completely in focus. I really like how the sun came out. I would say that I am an okay photographer I have most my pictures in focus with what is important in focus. I have learned how to keep my pictures with the main item in focus also the aperture, ISO, and shutter speed are important. I am looking forward to having more experience with taking awesome pictures. I chose a doctor because i have always wanted to be a doctor. in ten years i will be working in a hospital. i will also be recently out of the NAVY. i am Priscilla Presley. I chose her because i like elvis presley and because of the time era. first we took pictures. then i opened them in photoshop and then i put the second layer on and then edited them to erase and then merged the pictures together.
Compositional Rule: Symmetry Compositional Rule: Crop Cocmpostional Rule: Leading Line Compostional Rule: Rule Of Thirds HDR stands for High Dynamic Range imaging. I took 5 of each Compositional rule. One normal 0.0 exposed and 2 dials up and 2 dials down. Then i merged all five photos together then i set the picture to "more satrurated" to give it more effect. then came to the results.
To photograph the moon:
1. Use a tripod! A flat surface will only allow you to shoot straight, and shooting the moon means that you'll be shooting up and constantly re-adjusting the tripod as the moon moves throughout the night. 2. Use a shutter release cord, remote or the camera's self timer if you don't have one, so that you don't move the camera when pressing the shutter release during a long exposure. 3. Use a zoom lens and zoom in as much as you can to the moon. It's okay if it's not a super fancy lens, this was shot using a 15 year old $100 lens. Focus in on the craters and details on the moon. 4. ISO 1250- 1600, so that you can use as fast a shutter speed as you can without losing detail-the longer the shutter speed, the more chances you have the camera will shake even slightly in the wind, resulting in an out of focus photograph. 5. Aperture priority of f/5.6 since you are not worried about capturing any details other then the moon. 6. Bracket your exposure, meaning over expose and underexpose the photograph from what the camera is telling you. Generally the camera will overexpose the moon, so you'll get nothing but a white blob in the sky. Use the exposure compensation button (the +/- button below the shutter release) and change the exposure to -0.5, then -1.0, then -1.5 and so on, until you start seeing detail in the moon. You may go as far as -5.0 exposure compensation to get what you need. 7. Take a fair amount of photos and keep refocusing as the night progresses. The photographs may look focused on the camera's display, but you won't really see if they're completely in focus until you upload them onto your computer screen. |
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