Aperture



                                                                       F16 Photo^


                                                                      F2.8 Photo^

1. We should relate aperture to the pupil of our eyes. When the lighting in a room changes, our pupils adjust just like aperture can adjust. You can also shrink the size of the aperture just like a pupil does, controlling how much light you let into the photo. (or your eyes)

2. The smaller the aperture (number), the larger the aperture. Smaller apertures allow more light and less background blur into the photo. The higher the aperture (number), the smaller the aperture. Higher apertures allow less light, specific focus and more background blur into the photo.

3. Aperture impacts Depth of Field because a high aperture gives the photo a very detailed and specific focus while a small aperture gives the photo way less background blur. This can change many things in a photo- the subject, focus, etc. Depth and Field can make a photo very deep and is very significant to photos, so it is important to make sure it is used correctly.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Critiquing Another Photographer's Academic Shoot

Merger Photo