From the course: Pro-Level Photography for Graphic Designers

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Shooting indoors: ISO, aperture, and other considerations

Shooting indoors: ISO, aperture, and other considerations

From the course: Pro-Level Photography for Graphic Designers

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Shooting indoors: ISO, aperture, and other considerations

- This project is something you can do from home. In fact, this project is supposed to be done at home. Could be your home, another person's home, doesn't matter, but the point here is to shoot indoors, y'know, with just natural kind of low existing room light. Which brings up kind of a funny thing, sometimes a tragic thing, about shooting indoors. It's that our eyes can be telling us, they can tell us, hey, there is all kinds of light in this room. But our camera will often tell us something completely different, like, when it gives us shots that are blurred, and they're either blurred a little or a lot, and that's due to the low light causing slow shutter speeds. And the real tragedy that occurs with this situation sometimes is that we don't notice it until later on, when we're looking at our photos from the day on the computer and we're like, hey, these are unusable. It's too late to do anything about 'em. So, that said, let's practice this stuff, and I'm going to start this whole…

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