Exposure Triangle
Camera Basics
History of Photography
Elements of Art
Anything Goes
100

This is the Camera's sensitivity to light

What is ISO

100

This is what your camera saves photos to.

What is the SD Card?

100
The inventor responsible for the first photo of a person.

Who is Louis Daguerre?

100

These straight edges help guide your eyes to the focal point.

What are Leading Lines?

100

The first setting you'll adjust if your image is too bright or too white.

What is Shutter Speed?

200

It's the mechanism in a camera lens that controls the amount of light that passes through the lens.

What is the Aperture?

200

The mechanism that focuses the light onto the camera's sensor

What is the Camera Lens?

200

This camera signaled a major change photography; moving from film to digital.

What is the Nikon D1?

200

This element can be organic, geometric, or abstract

What is Shape?

200

This photographer's exploration of motion with photography helped to prove all of a horse's hooves leaves the ground at one point when galloping.

Who is Eadweard Muybridge?

300

The setting that times the amount of light that hits the sensor.

What is Shutter Speed?

300

This is how to change the camera's shooting mode from Auto to M (manual)

What is the Mode Dial?
300

On this date, the United States captured the first photo from space.

What is October 24th, 1946?

300

This element lets you "see" how something Feels.

What is Texture?

300
This is the setting you'll change if you want a shallow depth of field.

What is Aperture?

400

These are the three parts of the Exposure Triangle

What are Aperture, Shutter Speed, ISO?


400

This is what controls the camera's focal length.

What is the Zoom Lever?

400

This company released the first consumer roll camera with 100 exposures preloaded.

What is Kodak?

400

This element helps to isolate subjects by using large empty shapes

What is space?

400

This is the setting you change when you need to photograph in low light situation but will also introduce noise into your image.

What is ISO?

500

This is the minimum Shutter Speed needed to capture sports or fast motion.

What is 1/500s?


500

This is how you activate the camera's Auto Focus.

What is half pressing the shutter button?

500

This process produced the first glass negative and set the stage for our current film negative.

What is the Wet Collodion Process?

500

This element has multiple combinations commonly referred to as palettes or schemes. And can also affect how you feel or how a photo feels. 

What is Color?

500

The signal that is amplified from the camera's sensor to the camera's processing unit.

What is ISO?