Project 39 - using faster film and higher sensitivity

For this project I had to finds a scene that have mixture of light level and subject movement or depth of field and take the photo in medium and high sensitivity.

I try, of course, to photo outside so I will gain the light and movement as much as possible.

Scene 1: A tree in the wind
iso 200

iso: 400
I took this photos in a very windy and cold day, the leafs here didn't stop moving for a second. Except the obvious difference we see here in the photo lightning, we can see as well that the the medium sensitivity photo has much more depth.

Scene 2: A bus in the street
iso: 200

iso:400
Again, the movement is much more spotted in the higher ISO.

Scene 3: Ad in the wind
iso 200

iso 400

in this photo I think the higher sensitivity photo 'wins' in all categories and there is no advantage to the medium sensitivity one.

Scene 4: fancy car
iso 200

iso 400
Here I wanted to test the sensitivity on a still scene. You can see here too that the car itself looks better and lighter in the higher sensitivity photo but the background is clearer in the medium sensitivity one.

Scene 5: in the park
iso 200

iso 800
in this set I think the only difference is in the light of the photo without other difference in the depth. I personally prefer the medium sensitivity photo.

Scene 6: palace
iso:200

iso 400

In this picture it is obvious that higher sensitivity is required.

Project 38 - measuring intensity of light

This project is to make us familiarize with the different brightness through out the day.
For this, I took photos of a gray card outside my house, a photo every hour for a full day-light.
The camera was on ISO 100 and the shutter speed on 1/125 and with that I measured how much the F-no will be.
Unfortunately that was a sunny mid-winter day and the light hours were limited. If it was a mid summer day the graph was probably bigger and more ellipse shaped
i gathered the result in a graph:

Project 37 - filters with black and white film

For this project I had to take a still life photo of 3 colours: red, green and yellow and use different filters for that. As I have a digital camera this all made digitally.

No Filters:


B&W yellow filter:


B&W red filter


B&W blue filter


I think that for this photo the B&W red filter suit it the most.

Project 36 - warm and cool colours

In this project we'll do the strong division between warm and cool colours.
For the first part of the project I had to return to projects 32 and 33 and divide the photos to warm and cool photos:

warm:



I think that the warmest is the yellow photo

Cool:



I think the coolest photo is the blue one.

For the second part I had to produce 3 photos: one that shows cool-warm contrast, one within the cool set of colours and one within the warm set of colours.


Cool:


Warm:


Cool&Warm:

Project 35 - colour relationships

This project is divided to 2 parts.
In part one I had to take 3 photos of complementary colours sets: green-red, blue-orange and violet-yellow. It wasn't easy finding it in nature so I had to built a scene myself:

Green-red


Blue-Orange:


Yellow-violet:


The second part of the project contains photos of any mixture of strong colours.

My wallet:


A pole in the park:


A gate:


Roses:

Project 34 - black and white and grey as colours

In this project I was asked to take a photos of a white and a black coulors in different apertures to find out what is the affect of thous different apertures.

White:

aperture -2
aperture -12/3
aperture -11/3
aperture -1
aperture -2/3
aperture -1/3
meter reading
aperture +1/3
aperture +2/3
aperture +1
aperture +11/3
aperture +12/3
aperture +2

Black:
aperture -2
aperture -12/3
aperture -11/3
aperture -1
aperture -2/3
aperture -1/3
meter reading
aperture +1/3
aperture +2/3
aperture +1
aperture +11/3
aperture +12/3
aperture +2

From this project I have learned that the 'best' white I could capture will be in the highest aperture while the best black will be in the smallest one.