time and motion in photography

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Time and Motion in Photography How to freeze and blur movement.

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Time and Motion in Photography. How to freeze and blur movement. Shutter Speed. Controls the length of time the shutter remain open during the exposure. The slower the shutter speed the most likely a moving object will appear blurred . Shutter Speed. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Time and Motion  in  Photography

Time and Motion in PhotographyHow to freeze and blur movement.

Page 2: Time and Motion  in  Photography

Shutter Speed•Controls the length

of time the shutter remain open during the exposure.

•The slower the shutter speed the most likely a moving object will appear blurred.

Page 3: Time and Motion  in  Photography

Shutter Speed•The faster the

shutter speed the most likely the moving object with be sharp.

Page 4: Time and Motion  in  Photography

Shutter Speed and LightThe shutter controls the amount of light going into the camera by the length of time it remains open.

Page 5: Time and Motion  in  Photography

Shutter speeds are displayed in the camera view finder, on the shutter-speed dial, or as data panel read out.

Page 6: Time and Motion  in  Photography

Here, the camera is set to 1/250 sec. Notice that the camera displays only the bottom number of the fraction.

Page 7: Time and Motion  in  Photography

The Shutter and MotionThe faster the shutter speed, the more likely a moving object will be sharp.

Page 8: Time and Motion  in  Photography

Shutter speed and motion• The direction of a

moving object affects the amount of blur.

• When the object is traveling parallel to the plane of the film, considerable movement is likely to be recorded on the film and the object blurred . . . 1/30 second

Page 9: Time and Motion  in  Photography

Shutter speed and motion• . . . unless the

shutter speed is fast.

1/500 second

Page 10: Time and Motion  in  Photography

Shutter speed and motion• If the object is

moving towards or away from the camera, there is no sideways movement recorded on the film and so a minimum of blur is produced, even at a relatively slow shutter speed.

1/30 second

Page 11: Time and Motion  in  Photography

Shutter speed and motion•During

panning the camera is moved in the same direction as the subject.

•The result is a sharp subject and a blurred background.

1/30 second

Page 12: Time and Motion  in  Photography

Shutter speed and motion• The key in

photographing action is anticipation.

• What direction is the subject moving?

• Where should you be focused?

• When might an interesting moment occur?

Page 13: Time and Motion  in  Photography

Shutter speed and motion•Think about what is going to happen,

rather than trying to catch up to what has already happened.

Page 14: Time and Motion  in  Photography

BLURRED motion DEEP depth of field• A small aperture

(f/16) produced great depth of field; the nearest paving stones as well as the farthest tress are sharp.

• But to admit enough light, a slow shutter speed (1/8 sec.) was needed; it was too slow to show moving pigeons sharply.

Page 15: Time and Motion  in  Photography

Semi BLURRED motion semi SHALLOW depth of field

• A medium aperture (f/4) and shutter speed (1/125 sec.) sacrifice some background detail to produce recognizable images of the birds.

• But the exposure is too long to show the motion of the birds’ wings sharply.

Page 16: Time and Motion  in  Photography

FROZEN motion SHALLOW depth of field• A fast shutter speed

(1/500 sec) stops the motion of the pigeons so completely that the flapping wings are frozen.

• But the wide aperture (f/2) needed gives so little depth of field that the background is now out of focus.

Page 17: Time and Motion  in  Photography

Shutter and Aperture Together• Equivalent exposures:• Each combination of shutter speed and f-

stop produces the equivalent exposure (lets the same amount of light) but produces different depth of field and motion.

Page 18: Time and Motion  in  Photography

Shutter Speed Assignment:•Shoot 16 photographs of fast shutter

speed (frozen movement). Save as lastname.fast.psd

•Shoot 16 photos of slow shutter speed (blurred movement). Save as lastname.fast.psd

•Make a contact sheet. Save as lastname.contact.psd

•Pick one of your best fast and one of your best slow shutter speed.

•Turn in both along with your contact sheet and self-evaluation.

Page 19: Time and Motion  in  Photography

VISUAL QUIZ and ReviewWhat do you see?

Page 20: Time and Motion  in  Photography

Helen Levitt

Page 21: Time and Motion  in  Photography

Helen Levitt

Page 22: Time and Motion  in  Photography

RalphMeatyard

Page 23: Time and Motion  in  Photography

RalphMeatyard

Page 24: Time and Motion  in  Photography

Gary Winogrand

Page 25: Time and Motion  in  Photography

Jim Richardson

Page 26: Time and Motion  in  Photography

Jim Richardson

Page 27: Time and Motion  in  Photography

Gary Winogrand

Page 28: Time and Motion  in  Photography

Mary Ellen Mark

Page 29: Time and Motion  in  Photography

Mary Ellen Mark

Page 30: Time and Motion  in  Photography

Mary Ellen Mark

Page 31: Time and Motion  in  Photography

Anthony Hernandez

Page 32: Time and Motion  in  Photography

Anthony Hernandez

Page 33: Time and Motion  in  Photography

Dorothea Lange

Page 34: Time and Motion  in  Photography

Dorothea Lange

Page 35: Time and Motion  in  Photography

Any questions?