My Nikon D3000 has a 23.6mm x 15.8mm size CCD sensor; DX Format imaging sensor.
2. What is the maximum image size your camera is capable of shooting in terms of pixel width and height?
3,872 x 2,592 (10.2 effective megapixel)
3. What options do you have for controlling exposure with your camera?
My Nikon D3000 has 6 automatic exposure scene modes; portrait, landscape, child, sports, close-up and night portrait. I also have the option of setting it to just auto and auto flash-off as well as "M" or manual, "A" or aperture priority auto, "S" or shutter-priority auto and "P" or programmed auto with flexible program.
4. Describe some hypothetical situations in which you would want to use different exposure modes/settings.
Some situation in which we would want to use different exposure modes or settings is to maybe be able to capture "action shots" or "motion shots", where we would have to change the speed of the shutter. Also to create a sense of depth of field in a photo. In order to determine how much of an object is going to be in focus in the frame, once must change the f-stop settings.
5. What ASA/ISO range is your camera capable of? Why would you choose one over the other?
100-1600; Hi-1 (ISO 3200 equivalent); You would choose one ASA/ISO over another depending on how much light you want to allow to come through. The higher the number, the more sensitive it is to light. Higher numbers tend to work better for "darker" scenes and lower numbers tend to work better for "brighter" scenes. For example, an ISO of 50-100 would work for bright light conditions where as an ISO of 800-1500 would work for dark light conditions (but with more "digital noise").
6. What is white balance and what options do you have for adjusting it on your camera?
The Nikon D3000 offers a number of different white balance options:
Auto
Cloudy
Direct Sunlight
Fine Tune by Kelvin color temperature setting
Flash
Fluorescent (7 types)
Incandescent
Shade
Cloudy
Direct Sunlight
Fine Tune by Kelvin color temperature setting
Flash
Fluorescent (7 types)
Incandescent
Shade
7. What is the histogram and how do you use it?
A histogram is a graph that is read left to right that measures the levels of brightness of a picture. One may use it to change the "tone" of their photo.
8. Set your display options to show the histogram. Is the histogram available in the preview, or only after you have taken the picture?
The option of having a histogram displayed is available to be seen after a picture is taken on my DSLR.
Reading Quiz
1. On pages 1-3 Szarkowski describes many ways that photography offered a new kind of picture making process with a very different group of practitioners. Describe one of the ways that photography was a very different art form.
Photography was a very different art form, as described by Szarkowski. It provided a new picture-making process, that was based on selection and not synthesis. Paintings were constructed based on traditional skills and schemes that were TAUGHT. Photographs were taken, with no common tradition or training. They were "easy, cheap and ubiquitous, and it recorded anything", while the art of painting was difficult, expensive and only recorded what was "known to be important".
Photography was a very different art form, as described by Szarkowski. It provided a new picture-making process, that was based on selection and not synthesis. Paintings were constructed based on traditional skills and schemes that were TAUGHT. Photographs were taken, with no common tradition or training. They were "easy, cheap and ubiquitous, and it recorded anything", while the art of painting was difficult, expensive and only recorded what was "known to be important".
2. What does John Szarkowski mean by the characteristic “The Thing Itself”?
"The Thing Itself" is one of the first things that photographers learn; that photography dealt with the actual. The subject and the picture taken were not always the same, however, it was believed that this was an artistic problem and not a problem that could be fixed scientifically. It was easier for the public to believe that all photographs told the truth and could not lie and it was easier for photographers to also believe or pretended to believe that they could never lie or deceive.
"The Thing Itself" is one of the first things that photographers learn; that photography dealt with the actual. The subject and the picture taken were not always the same, however, it was believed that this was an artistic problem and not a problem that could be fixed scientifically. It was easier for the public to believe that all photographs told the truth and could not lie and it was easier for photographers to also believe or pretended to believe that they could never lie or deceive.
3. Szarkowski writes that the time that photographs describe is always the present. What does he mean?
Szarkowski means when he says that "the time that photographs describe is always in the present" only describes the period of time in which the picture was made/taken. Photos don't capture the past or the future, but rather that particular moment in time.
Szarkowski means when he says that "the time that photographs describe is always in the present" only describes the period of time in which the picture was made/taken. Photos don't capture the past or the future, but rather that particular moment in time.