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Published byBelinda Martin Modified over 9 years ago
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Shutter controls exposure of the film to light by opening and closing at various speeds. Focal-plane shutter is built into the camera body at the point directly in front of the film.
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Leaf shutters are located within the lens and consists of several small, overlapping spring- powered metal blades.
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Aperture also controls the exposure of the film to light. The aperture fixes the size of the lens opening. Larger aperture sizes allow more light through the lens. Smaller aperture sizes allow less light in. Measured in f-stops.
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A lens is a single element, a solid piece of curved glass. The lens sorts out various light rays, focuses them, and directs them to reproduce the subject accurately on film.
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Three formats of film: 35 mm film Medium-format roll film Sheets of film ( 4x5 inches and larger) Primary difference between film formats is the size of the negative.
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Strips of film are 35 mm wide and 2-3 feet long Packaged inside a cassette, which is held inside the camera. A pressure plate holds the film flat against the back of the camera.
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Viewfinder/Rangefinder Cameras View through eyepiece with simple lens Parallax error: viewfinder isn’t in same position as camera lens, so view is slightly different
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Twin-Lens Reflex Cameras One lens to film, the other mirrored to eye Image focused on ground glass
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View Cameras Direct viewing: ground glass is exactly where the film will be Large-format Usually uses sheet film
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Single-Lens Reflex Cameras View the actual image that will fall on the film Image focused on ground glass
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