Friday, 27 September 2013

movie shoot

First day on the set of "Priest in the family " movie. Portland is extremely windy today

Tuesday, 10 September 2013

This was a photo I processed in RAW mode. :-)


TAFE Photo Assessment part 5 - Narrow depth of field. f=5.6

Also with a focal length of 55cm but now with an aperture of f-stop=5.6, this photo has a very narrow depth of field. Only the branch and parts at the same distance are in-focus. Foreground + background are out of focus. The photo has the same brightness as the f=29 photo, but is much brighter than the f= 36 photo.

TAFE Photo Assessment part 5 - 2nd Large depth of field. f=36

This photo has the same focal length of 55cm but now with a f-stop value of 36. The higher f value has resulted in a darker photo but a slightly larger depth of field than with an f value of 29.

TAFE Photo Assessment part 5 - Large depth of field. f=29

With an f-stop aperture of 29 and a focal length of 55cm (set on the branch), the whole picture seems to be in-focus. It has a large depth of field.

TAFE Photo Assessment part 4 - 1/5000 sec exposure time.

At 1/5000th of a second exposure time the water also shows each droplet crystal clear with no motion blur whatsoever. The large aperture of 1/4.5 makes only the tap and droplets in focus, as near and far are out of focus.

TAFE Photo Assessment part 4 - 1/6400 sec exposure time.

At 1/6400th of a second exposure time the water shows each droplet crystal clear with no motion blur whatsoever. The large aperture of 1/4.5 makes only the tap and droplets in focus, as near and far are out of focus.

TAFE Photo Assessment part 3 - 1/640 second exposure time.

At 1/640th of a second exposure time the water drops are much clearer but stil have a slight bit of motion blur. Note the previous pictures at 1/20 + 1/160 had an aperture f-stop of 29, so the background was also in focus. This picture has an f-stop of 5.6, so the background is out of focus.

TAFE Photo Assessment part 3 - 1/160sec exposure time.

At 1/160th of a second exposure time the water looks like a series of very blurry drops.

TAFE Photo Assessment part 3 - 1/20sec exposure time.

At 1/20th of a second the water looks like a blurry stream.

TAFE Photo Assessment part 2 - f13 aperture


TAFE Photo Assessment part 2 - f20 aperture


TAFE Photo Assessment part 2 - f16 aperture