This chemical makes the image appear on photo paper
What is developer?
This controls how sensitive your camera is to light
What is ISO?
This rule divides an image into a 3x3 grid
What is rule of thirds?
This refers to how much of the image is in focus
What is depth of field?
This type of camera uses a tiny hole instead of a lens
What is a pinhole camera?
This chemical stops the development process
What is stop bath?
This controls how long light hits the sensor or film
What is shutter speed?
This technique uses mirror-like balance
What is symmetry?
What kind of depth of field means that only a small portion of the image is sharply focused, while the background is unfocused?
What is shallow depth of field?
The first step when loading film
What is open the camera back?
This chemical makes the image permanent and light-safe
What is fixer?
This controls the size of the lens opening
What is aperture?
These guide the viewer’s eye through an image
What are leading lines?
What kind of depth of field means that the entire image is in focus (foreground, middleground, and background)?
What is deep depth of field?
This part of the film must be pulled across to the spool
What is the film leader?
A camera-less image made by placing objects on light-sensitive paper
What is a photogram?
Fast shutter speeds are best for capturing this
What is motion/action?
This technique uses a doorway or window to frame a subject
What is frame within a frame?
Blurry backgrounds are often used to do this
What is isolate the subject?
What happens if film is exposed to light before developing?
What is it gets ruined?
Why must photos be handled in low or no light before fixing?
What is to prevent exposure/light damage?
Low ISO produces this kind of image quality
What is less grain / higher clarity?
Why is composition important?
What is to guide viewer attention / improve storytelling?
Which setting affects BOTH light and depth of field?
What is aperture?
Why must film be tightly wound when loading?
What is to ensure proper advancing and exposure?