7 messages in edu.ku.nhm.mailman.taxacomdigital images
FromSent OnAttachments
Timothy RoweAug 22, 1995 12:52 pm 
Alan HarveyAug 23, 1995 9:25 am 
Peter RauchAug 23, 1995 9:26 am 
Jim ManhartAug 23, 1995 9:26 am 
Joseph LaferriereAug 23, 1995 10:09 am 
Joseph LaferriereAug 23, 1995 1:27 pm 
Alan HarveyAug 23, 1995 2:56 pm 
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Subject:digital imagesActions...
From:Alan Harvey (ahar@AMNH.ORG)
Date:Aug 23, 1995 2:56:46 pm
List:edu.ku.nhm.mailman.taxacom

Joseph Laferriere wrote:

The problem is that the smaller the aperture, the longer the necessary exposure time. I once took a picture of the fruit of a Devil's claw (Proboscidea sp.) with a necessary depth of field of over 3 cm. The camera needed such a small aperature that it required a 60-second exposure. It came out beautifully. A video image is really a series of still photos shown in rapid sequence. The very nature of the medium prevents long exposure times.

Actually, the smaller the aperture, the less light reaches the medium per unit time, which can be compensated for by either increasing the exposure time OR increasing the intensity of the illumination. E.g., in photographing the Devil's claw fruit you could have gotten the same depth of field with a more typical 1/60 -1/90th second exposure with a strong enough flash (and without the color shifts due to reciprocity failure that often result from very long exposures). Still, still cameras probably are more flexible than video cameras in both respects (exposure duration and light intensity). Does anyone out there know how to synchronize a framegrabber/video system with a flash unit?

Alan

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Alan W. Harvey (aharvey at amnh.org) Assistant Curator of Invertebrates American Museum of Natural History Central Park West at 79th Street New York, NY 10024 (212) 769-5638