Need for Speed: Ten for Tuesday

Colors answer feelings in man;
shapes answer thoughts;
and motions answer will.
~ John Sterling

1.

Hi Friends!
Welcome to the seventh
of eight Ten for Tuesday,
where I share the latest
ten homework pictures
that I will be presenting
at my photography class
this week, along with some
tips for those of you
who want to learn 
alongside me.

This week's task:  To
take photos that 
demonstrate motion.

 2.

You can achieve this in one
 of two ways:  by letting
your subject move OR
by moving your camera.
You can also combine
the two.  

Shutter speed is key.

3.


We discussed shutter speed
in week two, here.  To
quickly recap, shutter speed
controls the ability to freeze
or show motion in a photograph.  

4.

In digital photography, shutter
speed is the moment the light
is recorded on the camera's
image sensor, which is 
controlled by how long the shutter 
stays open after you push down 
the camera's button. {Think of an
eye blinking slowly or rapidly.}

5.

Shutter speed can be set from
1 second {the shutter is open longest}
to 1/1000th of a second {the 
shutter is opened the shortest}.

The longer the shutter stays open,
the more information it will be
able to record on the image sensor.  
The shorter it stays open, the 
more it freezes the exact moment.

6.

Our teacher suggested slowing
down the shutter speed to
1/15th of a second or longer
to capture motion.  This is done
by putting your DSLR in
Shutter Priority mode, where
YOU select the shutter speed
and the camera selects the
camera's aperture {how wide
the opening in the lens will be.}


This is important because slowing down 
the shutter speed will allow more 
light to hit the image sensor, and
the extra light is compensated by
the aperture setting.  Phew!

7.

Now, while Gracie never tires
of jumping for treats for the
greater good of demonstrating
motion, I thought you might
want a bit of variety.  And my
kids absolutely refused to 
jump for treats, as did my husband.

8.


So, once again, I had to propel
myself outside of my snug
little house during a week of 
sub-zero temperatures in order to 
capture my homework assignment. 
{See how much I love you??}
 I got a few shots of cars
whizzing by the church down
the road and one at the paint
store, but beyond that, I was
stumped as to what I was going
to shoot.  

9.

So I did what any red-blooded
American girl would do.....
I turned my car towards the mall.  
Not any old mall, either, but The
 Mall of America, where there is a
big 'ol amusement park 
planted  smack dab in the middle : )

10.

Now, there was a time when
I would have considered shots
with blurring in them to be
bad pictures.  But through this
class, I have come to appreciate
using blur to convey a sense
of movement and even a story.

There are famous photographers
who use blur like a paint brush and
their photos look like paintings.  
They create the blur by moving
the camera either horizontally,
vertically or even diagonally while shooting.
It can truly be beautiful, almost
like impressionism.

This photographer uses camera movement to create this affect.

I hope you will be inspired to
play in Shutter Priority mode
and catch some movement
in your pictures.  I found it
to be challenging, but also
a whole lot of fun.  
And really,
shouldn't that be 
what it's all about?

xx
Suzanne

PS:
To read about
color in photography, 
check out Becky's post today, and 
link up to her Thrive Project.





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