Melanie Carbajal
Lighting Patterns



Front
shutter: 1/20
Aperture: f/ 5.6
ISO: 200
Split
Shutter: 1/50
Aperture: f/5.6
ISO: 800
Back
shutter: 1.3
Aperture f/5.6
ISO: 100


Top
Shutter: 1
Aperture: f/5.6
ISO: 100
Diffused
Shutter: 0.5
Aperture f/5.9
ISO: 800

Direct
Shutter: 1/125
Aperture: f/5.6
iSO: 400


Loop
Shutter: 1/125
Aperture: f/11
ISO: 100
Rembrant
Shutter: 1/125
Aperture: f/11
ISO: 100


Butterfly
Shutter: 1/125
Aperture: f/11
ISO: 100
Split
Shutter: 1/125
Aperture: f/11
ISO: 100

Rim
Shutter: 1/12
Aperture: f/11
ISO: 100
Review
My overall strengths for my project are creatively, experienced, and organized. An improvement that can be made is focusing the lens more to capture a more in focus/clearer photograph. I learned that light patterns can help shape and bring out the features of a person's face. Photographing an egg prepared me to photograph a classmate because it's a very similar shape to a person's head. It was way more simple to photograph an egg because an egg doesn't have hair or facial features (eyes, mouth, nose) like humans do. Lighting is important for a photographer to understand because it doesn't just help them determine the brightness and darkness, it also helps them set tone and mood to their photographs. There are many different types of lighting, in the future I would observer wherever I'm at in the moment to figure out which lighting is best for my photographs.