Monday, December 12, 2016
Thursday, December 8, 2016
Wednesday, November 30, 2016
Monday, November 28, 2016
Four Portraits
- Informal portrait
- No, this image does not use rule of thirds because the object that it is focused on is only in the middle.
- Asymmetrical
- Informal portrait
- Does not use rule of thirds because only focused on the center
- Asymmetrical.
- Selfie.
- Does use the third of thirds because the face takes up most of the frame and is split between the different grids
- Asymmetrical
- Informal portrait.
- It does use the rule of thirds because it splits the frame into different sections and does not only focus on the person in the frame.
- Asymmetrical.
- I like the fourth picture because it gives the viewer different things to look at without one main focus in the frame.
Thursday, November 17, 2016
Selfies
Chilling in photo class. Relaxed and pleased.
Feet photo.
At the Warriors game with my best friend. Excited and eager for the game to tip-off.
Cropped.
On a date with my girlfriend. Happy.
Rule of Thirds.
Family Selfie. Happy and safe.
My family defines me. I always put family first.
My little cousin who adores me and looks up to me. Proud and cheerful.
Any pose.
- On the cropped photo, it was originally a lot closer and intimate in the photo. However, we used a fish-eye lens to made the photo become wide-angle and able to capture the entire background.
- My favorite shot is with my family because I love my family. My family has always been one to look out for each other and having a picture like that to look back on is really special. My family is always there to support me and I know they will be there for me no matter what.
Tuesday, November 15, 2016
Thursday, November 10, 2016
Portrait Study
- The balance that was most effective was having the subject be in the center of my photo because it really gave focus to my subject instead of having other objects take attention away from them. They typically were the center of attention with nothing else distracting the viewer.
- The least effective was having the subject be above the rest of the photo. Showing too much of the torso of my subjects made the viewer focus more on the body than the actual face of the subject. It was distracting and didn't capture my main focus.
Wednesday, November 2, 2016
Formal Portraits
1. My favorite portrait is the first portrait because it has good lighting which helps me filter it correctly. The photoshop on that picture was pretty well done on that picture too.
2. Easiest part of the process was definitely hiding the blemishes on the face because it was as simple as a click.
3. The hardest part of the process was selecting the skin without taking too much of the hair or ears or anything else in the selection. It was a little difficult but nothing that hindered me from completing the photoshop process.
Friday, October 21, 2016
Wednesday, October 19, 2016
Monday, October 17, 2016
Light Painting
f-stop:8
iso: 200
f-stop: 7.1
iso: 100
f-stop: 9
iso: 200
- The lower the f-stop, the more exposure there is.
- The higher the f-stop, the less exposure there is.
- The shorter the exposure, the less light there was in the pictures.
- The longer the exposure, the more likely the picture will be too bright or unevenly lightened.
- The best setting was f-stop 8 and iso 200.
Tuesday, October 11, 2016
Black and White Photography
Photo 1 Original
Photo 1 Bright/Contrast
Photo 1 Curves
Photo 1 Levels
Photo 2 Original
Photo 2 Curves
Photo 2 Levels
- The tool that worked the best for the first image was the curves to get the best texture in the photo without losing detail that was important to the picture.
- The tool that worked the best for the second picture was the bright/contrast because it allowed the picture to not be too contrasted while giving it nice brightness.
- The tool that was the easiest to manipulate was the curves tool. It gave the user a lot of different options to obtain the optimum outcome.
- The image looked better better after applying some filters to the black and white photos. The contrast in the images was stronger in some and it gave more emphasis on the main objects in the picture. But overall, I believed that the original pictures without changing to black and white looks the best.
Friday, October 7, 2016
The President's Photographer
- Peter Souza practices photographic archive photography.
- Lyndon Johnson.
- Nixon told his photographer to leave the broadcast.
- President's personal barber room.
- In the hallway of the West Wing if the White House.
- About 13 hours.
- No, he cannot delete the photos because all the pictures are a part of the National Archive.
- I would like to be the President's photographer because it has a lot of perks and benefits while also being able to be so close to the President. It would be a life changing and amazing experience.
Monday, October 3, 2016
Bracketing
- The setting that worked the best is shutter speed at 1/30 and F-stop at 4.8.
- The setting that worked the worst was shutter 1/30 and F-stop at 6.3.
- Yes this exercise helped me understand more about f-stops and shutter speeds because it helped me understand which settings to use in low lighting and to get the best exposure.
- The best way to change the depth of field is changing the F-stop in order to change the depth of field.
Wednesday, September 28, 2016
Thursday, September 22, 2016
Scavenger Hunt
photo at 6 pm.
a building.
bird looking at the ground.
person with busy background.
moving vehicle with a busy background.
person with a plain background.
excitement.
person who stands out in a crowd.
photo at 4 pm.
ant looking for food.
detail.
part of a building.
photo at 9 am.
something shiny.
loneliness.
photo at noon.
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