<span>The answer is true.
Keats began developing symptoms of tuberculosis. His doctors recommended that he go to Italy
and left on September 13, 1820.
Unfortunately the ship in which he traveled in was quarantined due to an
cholera epidemic and he arrived on November 30, 1820. His condition grew worse and during his last
months, his condition grew worse.
Despite the care given to him, Keats died in February 23, 1821 while he
was in Rome. He was buried in Protestant
Cemetery afterwards.</span>
I think color has an impact on me because of how much they can mean, and stand for. How you use colors can describe feelings, and emotions that can help you understand how an artist feels. Another important thing is how color can bring life to a painting, or drawing. I also believe that color can help give a certain vibe, and effect to everyone who see’s it.
The answer is letter B. tell the story of their tribes. Prehistoric painters used the pigments available in the vicinity. <span>The most common subjects in cave paintings are called finger flutings which are large wild animals, such as </span>bison<span>, </span>horses<span>, </span>aurochs<span>, and </span>deer<span>, and tracings of human hands. This can conclude that they want to tell people and decorate the cave about the situations they experience.</span>
Because failure puts us outside of our comfort zone, it's prime breeding ground for new creativity. When we fail and reassess what went wrong, we're causing ourselves to improve, whether we recognize the improvement process or not. This is when our technical photography skills begin to grow.
Answer:
1.Why is exposure a subjective decision?
Exposure is the amount of light you let in the camera to take the picture. If you let in lots of light, the resulting picture will be bright and if, on the other way, you left only a little bit of light in the camera, the picture will be dark.
Although the camera could select the perfect exposure for a given photo, to enhance most/all details, the photographer should intervene to decide the amount of the light he wants in... to control the overall feeling/ambiance of the photo. It's his photo, a second photographer might come in and make different decisions regarding the exact same location and composition. Just like a painter will approach the empty canvas its own personal way.
2.How do our decisions about aperture and shutter speed influence the photography that we take?
Aperture and shutter speed are the tools used to control the amount of light in the camera, the exposure talked about in previous question.
The best way to discuss this is to take a classic example. Imagine you want to take a photo of a fountain or a small waterfall. There is movement there. Is it better to take a photo with a very fast shutter speed to capture individual drops flying in the air, freezing the time? Or to do a long exposure to show the flow of the water? Maybe somewhere between those two extremes? All these answers are good and depend on what the photographer wants to transmit as message. That's where the subjectivity comes into play. As you play with the shutter speed, you also need to adjust the aperture to control the overall exposure of the photo.