MarkBarbieri
Semi-retired
- Joined
- Aug 20, 2006
- Messages
- 6,172
Anyone want to test my quiz? My wife is still having trouble remembering some of the core settings of her camera, so I put together a quick quiz for her. The idea is that she'll not only pick an answer, but she'll be able to explain why it is the best answer. Where she can't pick the best answer, we'll have learning opportunities. I figured I'd test it here so that someone can tell me which questions are really bad.
1) Youre in a moderately lit room at a cocktail party. You want to take a picture of a person, but you want them isolated. You want everything behind them to be blurry, but you want them to be sharp. The person is moving around, but not very quickly. You are zoomed in to 100mm.
a. ISO 200, Aperture f/2.8, Shutter Speed 1/30
b. ISO 800, Aperture f/2.8, Shutter Speed 1/120
c. ISO 800, Aperture f/5.6, Shutter Speed 1/30
d. ISO 100, Aperture f/2.8, Shutter Speed 1/15
e. ISO 1600, Aperture f/8, Shutter Speed 1/30
2) Youre taking a picture of a person with some beautiful scenery in the distance behind them. You want the person and the scenery to be in focus. The person is about 6 feet away from you and the scenery is miles away from you.
a. ISO 200, Aperture f/11, Shutter Speed 1/60
b. ISO 100, Aperture f/4, Shutter Speed, 1/250
c. ISO 800, Aperture f/22, Shutter Speed 1/60
d. ISO 100, Aperture f/16, Shutter Speed 1/15
3) Youre taking a picture of a painting hanging on a wall about 10 feet away using a lens at 24-70mm f/2.8 lens at 70mm. Your camera is on a tripod. You want the sharpest possible shot.
a. ISO 400, f/8, 1/125
b. ISO 100, f/2.8, 1/500
c. ISO 100, f/8, 1/30
d. ISO 1600, f/16, 1/125
4) You are shooting someone standing at a lectern. The background behind them is indistinct and not very distracting. You look at your LCD and you see that the camera settings are ISO 3200, f/2.8, 1/4000. You are using a 135mm f/2 lens. Which settings would work better?
a. ISO 100, f/8, 1/15
b. ISO 1600, f/16, 1/60
c. ISO 400, f/5.6, 1/125
d. ISO 200, f/2, 1/500
e. ISO 3200, f/11, 1/250
5) You are taking a picture of someone riding a bike from one side of your frame to another. You want to make a sharp picture that freezes them and leaves the background out of focus. You are shooting at 200mm on a 70-200 f/2.8 image stabilized lens.
a. ISO 100, f/8, 1/125
b. ISO 3200, f/16, 1/500
c. ISO 100, f/4, 1/500
d. ISO 400, f/4, 1/2000
6) You are taking a picture of a group of people riding by bicycles. This time, you want a picture that shows the entire group reasonably sharp, but you want the background to show a motion blur. This group is closer, so you are zoomed out to 100mm on your 70-200 f/2.8 IS lens.
a. ISO 100, f/8, 1/60
b. ISO 400, f/8, 1/250
c. ISO 1600, f/8, 1/1000
d. ISO 400, f/4, 1/1000
7) You are taking a picture on the Universe of Energy ride in Epcot. You are shooting with a 135mm f/2 lens. Its dark and you are struggling to get a shot. Which are your best settings?
a. ISO 6400, f/2, 1/60
b. ISO 3200, f/2, 1/30
c. ISO 3200, f/4, 1/8
d. ISO 6400, f/2.8, 1/30
8) You want to take a picture that shows your subject (a person) and the environment that they are in. You want the background to be blurry but you want your subject to be sharp. You have a 24mm f/1.4 lens, a 24-105 f/4 IS lens, a 70-200 f/2.8 IS lens, and a 135mm f/2 lens.
a. 24mm lens, ISO 100, f/2, 1/125
b. 24-105mm f/4 IS lens at 24mm, ISO 100, f/4, 1/30
c. 70-200mm f/2.8 IS lens at 200mm, ISO 100, f/2.8, 1/60
d. 135mm f/2 lens, ISO 100, f/2.8, 1/60
9) When you are taking a panning shot with an IS lens, the IS should be:
a. Turned off
b. Turned on, in Mode 1
c. Turned on, in Mode 2
10) If you are trying to make the background behind someone blurry, you should:
a. Use a bigger f-number (f/16 instead of f/4) and move them closer to the background.
b. Use a bigger f-number (f/16 instead of f/4) and move them away from the background.
c. Use a smaller f-number (f/4 instead of f/16) and move them closer to the background.
d. Use a smaller f-number (f/4 instead of f/16) and move them away from the background.
11) Zooming a zoom lens has the same effect as moving towards or away from your subject
a. Yes
b. No
12) Does the focal length of your lens make any difference to the shutter speed that you want to use to get a sharp picture?
a. No, you always want a shutter speed of 1/125 or faster for a sharp picture.
b. Yes, the shorter the lens, the faster your shutter speed needs to be because the wider view of a shorter lens shows more motion.
c. Yes, the longer the lens, the faster your shutter speed needs to be because longer lenses magnify everything (including camera movement) more.
13) If you are shooting something in relatively low light that isnt moving and the light isnt changing (such as the interior of a church), which would help you the most:
a. Image Stabilization
b. A tripod
c. A fast lens
14) If you are shooting something in relatively low light that is moving fairly rapidly (such as a gymnast in a gymnasium), which would help you the most:
a. Image Stabilization
b. A tripod
c. A fast lens
15) What advantage is there to shooting a 50mm f/1.4 lens at f/11 compared with shooting a 17-55mm f/3.5-f/5.6 lens zoomed to 50mm and also at f/11?
a. The f/1.4 lens lets you use a faster shutter speed at f/8 than the 17-55 lens because it is a faster lens.
b. The viewfinder will be brighter and it will be easier to see what is in focus using the f/1.4 lens.
c. The image from the 50mm f/1.4 lens will look much better because the image is much better for primes than it is for zooms.
d. There really isnt any advantage. 50mm at f/11, is 50mm at f/11. At the same settings, youll get the same image.
16) You are taking a picture of a person on a dark stage. When you look at your LCD, you see lots of blinkies on the person, indicating that he is overexposed. To fix that problem, you could:
a. Switch spot metering mode and meter off of the persons face.
b. Switch the camera to manual exposure mode and lower the shutter speed, raise the aperture, or lower the ISO until the person looks properly exposed.
c. Try dialing in negative exposure compensation until the person is properly exposed.
d. Zoom in tighter so that the person fills most of the frame and you dont see much of the dark stage.
17) If your primary concern is making sure that you have shallow DOF as your subject quickly moves between different lighting situations, should you be shooting in P, Av, Tv, or M mode?
18) If you are trying to take panning shots of subjects moving through rapidly changing light levels, you should be shooting in P, Av, Tv, or M mode?
19) If conditions are changing rapidly, youve got a lot of things to deal with, and you are really arent that concerned about shallow DOF, panning, or any of that stuff, you should be shooting in P, Av, Tv, or M mode?
20) If you are using an f/2.8 lens, which aperture will give you the sharpest picture:
a. Duh, f/2.8 thats what the lens is designed for.
b. f/5.6
c. f/22
d. f/1.4
1) Youre in a moderately lit room at a cocktail party. You want to take a picture of a person, but you want them isolated. You want everything behind them to be blurry, but you want them to be sharp. The person is moving around, but not very quickly. You are zoomed in to 100mm.
a. ISO 200, Aperture f/2.8, Shutter Speed 1/30
b. ISO 800, Aperture f/2.8, Shutter Speed 1/120
c. ISO 800, Aperture f/5.6, Shutter Speed 1/30
d. ISO 100, Aperture f/2.8, Shutter Speed 1/15
e. ISO 1600, Aperture f/8, Shutter Speed 1/30
2) Youre taking a picture of a person with some beautiful scenery in the distance behind them. You want the person and the scenery to be in focus. The person is about 6 feet away from you and the scenery is miles away from you.
a. ISO 200, Aperture f/11, Shutter Speed 1/60
b. ISO 100, Aperture f/4, Shutter Speed, 1/250
c. ISO 800, Aperture f/22, Shutter Speed 1/60
d. ISO 100, Aperture f/16, Shutter Speed 1/15
3) Youre taking a picture of a painting hanging on a wall about 10 feet away using a lens at 24-70mm f/2.8 lens at 70mm. Your camera is on a tripod. You want the sharpest possible shot.
a. ISO 400, f/8, 1/125
b. ISO 100, f/2.8, 1/500
c. ISO 100, f/8, 1/30
d. ISO 1600, f/16, 1/125
4) You are shooting someone standing at a lectern. The background behind them is indistinct and not very distracting. You look at your LCD and you see that the camera settings are ISO 3200, f/2.8, 1/4000. You are using a 135mm f/2 lens. Which settings would work better?
a. ISO 100, f/8, 1/15
b. ISO 1600, f/16, 1/60
c. ISO 400, f/5.6, 1/125
d. ISO 200, f/2, 1/500
e. ISO 3200, f/11, 1/250
5) You are taking a picture of someone riding a bike from one side of your frame to another. You want to make a sharp picture that freezes them and leaves the background out of focus. You are shooting at 200mm on a 70-200 f/2.8 image stabilized lens.
a. ISO 100, f/8, 1/125
b. ISO 3200, f/16, 1/500
c. ISO 100, f/4, 1/500
d. ISO 400, f/4, 1/2000
6) You are taking a picture of a group of people riding by bicycles. This time, you want a picture that shows the entire group reasonably sharp, but you want the background to show a motion blur. This group is closer, so you are zoomed out to 100mm on your 70-200 f/2.8 IS lens.
a. ISO 100, f/8, 1/60
b. ISO 400, f/8, 1/250
c. ISO 1600, f/8, 1/1000
d. ISO 400, f/4, 1/1000
7) You are taking a picture on the Universe of Energy ride in Epcot. You are shooting with a 135mm f/2 lens. Its dark and you are struggling to get a shot. Which are your best settings?
a. ISO 6400, f/2, 1/60
b. ISO 3200, f/2, 1/30
c. ISO 3200, f/4, 1/8
d. ISO 6400, f/2.8, 1/30
8) You want to take a picture that shows your subject (a person) and the environment that they are in. You want the background to be blurry but you want your subject to be sharp. You have a 24mm f/1.4 lens, a 24-105 f/4 IS lens, a 70-200 f/2.8 IS lens, and a 135mm f/2 lens.
a. 24mm lens, ISO 100, f/2, 1/125
b. 24-105mm f/4 IS lens at 24mm, ISO 100, f/4, 1/30
c. 70-200mm f/2.8 IS lens at 200mm, ISO 100, f/2.8, 1/60
d. 135mm f/2 lens, ISO 100, f/2.8, 1/60
9) When you are taking a panning shot with an IS lens, the IS should be:
a. Turned off
b. Turned on, in Mode 1
c. Turned on, in Mode 2
10) If you are trying to make the background behind someone blurry, you should:
a. Use a bigger f-number (f/16 instead of f/4) and move them closer to the background.
b. Use a bigger f-number (f/16 instead of f/4) and move them away from the background.
c. Use a smaller f-number (f/4 instead of f/16) and move them closer to the background.
d. Use a smaller f-number (f/4 instead of f/16) and move them away from the background.
11) Zooming a zoom lens has the same effect as moving towards or away from your subject
a. Yes
b. No
12) Does the focal length of your lens make any difference to the shutter speed that you want to use to get a sharp picture?
a. No, you always want a shutter speed of 1/125 or faster for a sharp picture.
b. Yes, the shorter the lens, the faster your shutter speed needs to be because the wider view of a shorter lens shows more motion.
c. Yes, the longer the lens, the faster your shutter speed needs to be because longer lenses magnify everything (including camera movement) more.
13) If you are shooting something in relatively low light that isnt moving and the light isnt changing (such as the interior of a church), which would help you the most:
a. Image Stabilization
b. A tripod
c. A fast lens
14) If you are shooting something in relatively low light that is moving fairly rapidly (such as a gymnast in a gymnasium), which would help you the most:
a. Image Stabilization
b. A tripod
c. A fast lens
15) What advantage is there to shooting a 50mm f/1.4 lens at f/11 compared with shooting a 17-55mm f/3.5-f/5.6 lens zoomed to 50mm and also at f/11?
a. The f/1.4 lens lets you use a faster shutter speed at f/8 than the 17-55 lens because it is a faster lens.
b. The viewfinder will be brighter and it will be easier to see what is in focus using the f/1.4 lens.
c. The image from the 50mm f/1.4 lens will look much better because the image is much better for primes than it is for zooms.
d. There really isnt any advantage. 50mm at f/11, is 50mm at f/11. At the same settings, youll get the same image.
16) You are taking a picture of a person on a dark stage. When you look at your LCD, you see lots of blinkies on the person, indicating that he is overexposed. To fix that problem, you could:
a. Switch spot metering mode and meter off of the persons face.
b. Switch the camera to manual exposure mode and lower the shutter speed, raise the aperture, or lower the ISO until the person looks properly exposed.
c. Try dialing in negative exposure compensation until the person is properly exposed.
d. Zoom in tighter so that the person fills most of the frame and you dont see much of the dark stage.
17) If your primary concern is making sure that you have shallow DOF as your subject quickly moves between different lighting situations, should you be shooting in P, Av, Tv, or M mode?
18) If you are trying to take panning shots of subjects moving through rapidly changing light levels, you should be shooting in P, Av, Tv, or M mode?
19) If conditions are changing rapidly, youve got a lot of things to deal with, and you are really arent that concerned about shallow DOF, panning, or any of that stuff, you should be shooting in P, Av, Tv, or M mode?
20) If you are using an f/2.8 lens, which aperture will give you the sharpest picture:
a. Duh, f/2.8 thats what the lens is designed for.
b. f/5.6
c. f/22
d. f/1.4





