What are the two main kinds of cameras in the world?
What is the SLR Camera and the Point and Shoot Camera?
How do photographers refer to different aperture settings?
What is F-Stops?
How do we measure Shutter Speed?
What is seconds?
As your ISO increases, what happens to your image?
What is low image quality?
Define Bracketing
What is taking the same photo at different exposures?
What are the three things in the "Exposure Triangle"?
What is Aperture, ISO, Shutter Speed?
What is the definition of Aperture?
What is the diameter of the lens opening?
What is the definition of shutter speed?
What is the amount of time the shutter is open?
What is the definition of ISO?
What is the rating of the sensitivity of the sensor to light?
If your taking senior portraits outside in full son, which of the exposure triangle are you most likely to change if you need to make the image brighter/darker?
What is Shutter Speed?
What does the Point and Shoot Camera do?
Focusing and exposure are completely automatic (users point camera and push start button)
Aperture controls Depth of Field: What is Depth of Field?
What is the distance in the image where objects appear in focus?
What else does shutter speed control?
What is motion blur?
If your photographing in broad daylight outside, which ISO should you use: ISO 100 or ISO 1000?
What is ISO 100
If its a sunny day and your ISO is 200, F/11, and SS at 1/250, you change your ISO to 400, and aperture to F/8, what should you change your SS to?
What does the SLR Camera stand for?
What is the difference between a shallow DOF and deep DOF?
Deep DOF: Everything is in Focus; Shallow DOF: only one thing in focus, and everything else is blurry
If you want to freeze motion, which shutter speed should you use: 1/60 or 1/1000?
What is 1/1000?
If you change your ISO from 100 to 800 for better low-light performances, what adjustments should you make to an aperture of F/2.8 if shutter speed stays the same?
What is F/8?
What does the SLR Camera do?
45 angled mirror that flips up when shutter fires; light strikes the image sensor/film
What is the general rule of thumb that photographers use when determining whether or not they can hand-hold their camera at certain shutter speeds?
What is the recipricol of the lens you use?