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Test your basic knowledge |
Photography Basics
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
visual-arts
,
photography
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. A composition rule that divides the screen into thirds horizontally and vertically - like a tic-tac toe grid placed over the picture on a television set. Almost all of the important information included in every shot is located at one of the four int
Normal Lens
Rule of Thirds
Zoom Lens
Resampling
2. An acronym for Joint Photographic Experts Group that describes an image file format standard in which the size of the file is reduced by compressing it. JPEG - with its 16.7 million colors - is well suited to compressing photographic images. A 'JPEG'
ISO
JPEG (also known as JPG)
Model Release
Bulb 'B' setting
3. A clear - neutral filter that absorbs ultraviolet radiation - with no effect on visible colors. The skylight filter is a UV filter with a pale rose tinge to it.
Depth of Field
GIF
DSLR
UV Filter
4. (Graphics Interchange Format) is a small image file format that supports transparency and is constrained to a maximum of 256 colors - generally making it a poor choice for your digital images. When it was created - most computer video cards were able
Monochrome
UV Filter
GIF
Painting with Light
5. (Graphics Interchange Format) is a small image file format that supports transparency and is constrained to a maximum of 256 colors - generally making it a poor choice for your digital images. When it was created - most computer video cards were able
GIF
Resampling
RGB
Lossless
6. An image file type created in Adobe PhotoShop that results in pictures that are viewable with Adobe Acrobat - so someone (Mac or PC-user) who doesn't have PhotoShop can still view the image. It is often used in forms creation and for documents that r
Ambient Light
Depth of Field
PDF
Butterfly Lighting
7. Refers to a million pixels - and is used in describing the number of pixels that a digital device's image sensor has.
Megapixel
JPEG (also known as JPG)
Rembrandt Lighting
Through-the-Lens
8. Exchangeable Image File Format. Data produced by a digital camera that becomes attached to each image made by the camera - including make & model of camera - date & time - image format (e.g. jpeg - tiff - etc.)and dimensions - color & exposure modes
Ambient Light
Golden Hour
White Balance
EXIF
9. Technique that involves taking a picture while moving the camera at a relatively slow shutter speed. It is almost always used when tracking a moving object - such as a race car - as it travels across the film plane. When properly carried out - the ob
High Key
Low Key
Panning
Normal Lens
10. An accessory that attaches as a collar to the front of a lens to prevent stray light from striking the surface of the lens - causing flare
Aperture Priority
Lens Hood
Panning
Raw Image
11. A lighting technique that is sometimes used in studio portrait photography. It can be achieved using one light and a reflector - or two lights - and is popular because it is capable of producing images which appear both natural and compelling with a
Lossless
Megabyte
Golden Hour
Rembrandt Lighting
12. Lens with a focal length approximately equal to the diagonal of the film format or of a digital camera's image sensor. A scene viewed through a normal lens appears to have the same perspective as if it was being viewed 'normally' without a lens - jus
Ambient Light
Normal Lens
Megapixel
PDF
13. Commonly abbreviated as 'TTL'. Refers to both exposure metering of the light passing through the lens (Through-the-lens metering - and TTL flash metering) and viewing a scene through the same lens that allows light to reach the sensor or the film (Th
Zoom Lens
PDF
High Key
Through-the-Lens
14. Occurs when saving a digital image file in a format that does not result in a loss of data. A TIFF and PSD documents are examples of lossless image formats
Lossless
Hyperfocal Point/Distance
Noise
Rembrandt Lighting
15. Commonly abbreviated as 'TTL'. Refers to both exposure metering of the light passing through the lens (Through-the-lens metering - and TTL flash metering) and viewing a scene through the same lens that allows light to reach the sensor or the film (Th
Rule of Thirds
Through-the-Lens
f-stop
f-stop
16. A million bytes - abbreviated as MB - Mb and sometimes Mbyte. Technically and more precisely - it refers to 1 -048 -576 bytes. Digital images are often referred to in terms of their 'size in Mb'.
Gray Card
Megabyte
Graininess
Ambient Light
17. Any device used to reflect light onto a subject.
Megabyte
JPEG (also known as JPG)
Reflector
Panning
18. A complementary color is one of a pair of primary or secondary colors that are in opposition to each other on a color wheel.
RGB
Kelvin
Complimentary Color
Aperture Priority
19. A lens with the ability to focus from infinity to extremely closely - allowing it to capture images of tiny objects in frame-filling - larger-than-life sizes.
Noise
Macro Lens
GIF
Reciprocal Rule
20. If you're hand holding your camera - your shutter speed should not be slower than the reciprocal of your effective focal length (but not lower than 1/50th of a second) in order to avoid 'camera shake -' i.e. the blur that results from any slight move
Panning
Reciprocal Rule
Hyperfocal Point/Distance
CMYK
21. An image of a single color in differing shades. A black and white or sepia-toned image is a monochrome. Another monochromatic image is the cyanotype - or blue-green image made popular in blueprints.
Panning
Reciprocal Rule
Monochrome
Hyperfocal Point/Distance
22. A fall-off in brightness at the edges of an image - slide - or print. Can be caused by poor lens design - using a lens hood not matched to the lens - or attaching too many filters to the front of the lens. It can also be applied after the image is ta
Reflector
Vignetting
Panning
Butterfly Lighting
23. When the lens is focused on infinity - the nearest point to the camera that is considered acceptably sharp is the Hyperfocal point. By focusing on the hyperfocal point - everything beyond it to infinity remains in acceptable focus - and objects halfw
Model Release
Bokeh
Vignetting
Hyperfocal Point/Distance
24. When the lens is focused on infinity - the nearest point to the camera that is considered acceptably sharp is the Hyperfocal point. By focusing on the hyperfocal point - everything beyond it to infinity remains in acceptable focus - and objects halfw
Hyperfocal Point/Distance
RGB
Depth of Field
Lossy
25. A lens aperture setting calibrated to an f-number
Normal Lens
RGB
Lens Hood
f-stop
26. The range of distance in a scene that appears to be in focus and will be reproduced as being acceptably sharp in an image. Depth of field is controlled by the lens aperture - and extends for a distance in front of and behind the point on which the le
Depth of Field
Raw Image
Kelvin
Megabyte
27. A shutter speed dial setting that indicates that the shutter will remain open as long as the release button is depressed - also known as the 'B setting ' or 'Bulb' setting. The 'B' setting is used for time exposures.
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28. An acronym for Joint Photographic Experts Group that describes an image file format standard in which the size of the file is reduced by compressing it. JPEG - with its 16.7 million colors - is well suited to compressing photographic images. A 'JPEG'
Butterfly Lighting
CMYK
JPEG (also known as JPG)
Interpolation
29. The primary colors of light (not of the inks used in printing) are red - green and blue - known by the acronym RGB.
UV Filter
Aperture Priority
Rule of Thirds
RGB
30. A digital camera analyzes a scene using its white balance mode to determine areas that should be recorded as pure white. The camera adjusts the overall scene's color balance so that the areas meant to be reproduced as white in the picture will be whi
EXIF
ISO
TIFF
White Balance
31. Or - electronic noise. This is the grainy look you find in a digital image caused by image artifacts. It is usually noticeable in shadow areas - and generally produced when shooting in low light. Noise is almost always unwanted and unattractive.
White Balance
Lens Hood
Noise
Golden Hour
32. If you're hand holding your camera - your shutter speed should not be slower than the reciprocal of your effective focal length (but not lower than 1/50th of a second) in order to avoid 'camera shake -' i.e. the blur that results from any slight move
Reciprocal Rule
Rule of Thirds
JPEG (also known as JPG)
Aperture Priority
33. Any device used to reflect light onto a subject.
CMYK
Rule of Thirds
Butterfly Lighting
Reflector
34. Tagged Image File Format - A standard digital image format for bitmapped graphics in an uncompressed state. The image files are much larger than compressed files - but can be opened in all image-processing programs.
TIFF
Normal Lens
DSLR
Megapixel
35. A digital camera analyzes a scene using its white balance mode to determine areas that should be recorded as pure white. The camera adjusts the overall scene's color balance so that the areas meant to be reproduced as white in the picture will be whi
White Balance
Lossy
High Key
GIF
36. A form of image compression when saving the image that discards data from it. Saving a picture as a JPEG uses lossy compression.
Noise
Reciprocal Rule
Resampling
Lossy
37. Adding new pixels to a digital image between existing pixels. Interpolation software analyzes the adjacent pixels to create the new ones when enlarging an image file.
PSD
Interpolation
FPS
Through-the-Lens
38. A clear - neutral filter that absorbs ultraviolet radiation - with no effect on visible colors. The skylight filter is a UV filter with a pale rose tinge to it.
Complimentary Color
UV Filter
FPS
High Key
39. In a studio - the main light is placed fairly high - directly in front of the face - aimed at the center of the nose. It casts a shadow shaped like a butterfly beneath the nose.
Lossy
Gray Card
Butterfly Lighting
Normal Lens
40. Existing light surrounding a subject; the light that is illuminating a scene without any additional light supplied by the photographer. This is also called 'available light'.
Ambient Light
Painting with Light
PSD
Monochrome
41. A function or shooting mode of a semi-automatic camera that permits the photographer to preset the aperture and leaves the camera to automatically determine the correct shutter speed. What does that mean? You select the aperture setting you want and
Aperture Priority
Bokeh
Lossless
Rule of Thirds
42. Film speed or sensitivity is designated by a single - almost universally-accepted common system developed by the International Organization for Standardization which uses the initials 'ISO' before the film-speed number or digital camera's sensitivity
Rembrandt Lighting
Interpolation
DSLR
ISO
43. CMYK - An acronym for the ink colors Cyan (process blue) - Magenta (process red) - Yellow and Black used in four-color process printing.
Golden Hour
Model Release
CMYK
Panning
44. Occurs when an image editing program is used to change an image's size. Increasing an image's size requires the addition of new pixels and decreasing size removes pixels.
Reciprocal Rule
Resampling
Reflector
Graininess
45. The time an hour or less before the sun goes down and around fifteen minutes after the sun has set. Sunlight is usually warmer and more complimentary to skin tones at this time - and the angle of the light can provide depth to portraits and landscape
Vignetting
Ambient Light
RGB
Golden Hour
46. A lens with the ability to focus from infinity to extremely closely - allowing it to capture images of tiny objects in frame-filling - larger-than-life sizes.
CMYK
Raw Image
Macro Lens
Normal Lens
47. A lens in which focal length is variable. Elements inside a zoom lens shift their positions - enabling the lens to change its focal length - in effect - providing one lens that has many focal lengths. (Also called a 'Variable focus lens.')
Reflector
Ambient Light
Through-the-Lens
Zoom Lens
48. A lens in which focal length is variable. Elements inside a zoom lens shift their positions - enabling the lens to change its focal length - in effect - providing one lens that has many focal lengths. (Also called a 'Variable focus lens.')
Panning
Zoom Lens
Resampling
White Balance
49. Exchangeable Image File Format. Data produced by a digital camera that becomes attached to each image made by the camera - including make & model of camera - date & time - image format (e.g. jpeg - tiff - etc.)and dimensions - color & exposure modes
GIF
Butterfly Lighting
EXIF
DSLR
50. Sometimes called camera raw - raw format - raw image format and raw. A digital image storage format that contains the most information possible from a camera's sensor. RAW data ( a RAW image file) is unprocessed. Some folks consider it to be the digi
Lens Hood
Raw Image
Hyperfocal Point/Distance
UV Filter