Thursday, December 12, 2013

Caption Writing

1. Joey Gray kisses Beth Gonzalez on Friday at 2:30 p.m. in Times Square in New York City. Gray excitedly grabbed Gonzalez when the news was announced that the allies had defeated the Nazis, ending World War II.           

2.  Billy bob was strolling down his local college campus through what seemed to be a nice and sunny day, or so he thought. Apparently he would find himself in an altercation with a then stranger Sharkeisha. She would throw one deadly punch. 
3. Here Nikki Yung, age 4, runs from Godzilla. Sunday, October 5th, will be remembered as a day of horror.

4. Tuesday this photo flooded the internet and social media. This man is tortured by American soldiers for being a co-conspirator in terror attacks.


5. Here Japanese drug lord Yung Kim threatens one of his soldiers for coming up short. Kim would later fatally shoot him.



Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Rules of Photography Part 2

LINES 
 BACKGROUND
 CROPPING
 VIEWPOINT
 SYMMETRY & PATTERNS
 RULE OF THIRDS
 DEPTH
 FRAMING
 BALANCE



 MERGERS


Monday, November 4, 2013

Academics Shoot Reflection

1. One problem I encountered was how to incorporate the rules of composition into every academic picture.

2. I believe something I found myself doing constantly was holding the camera and how to capture the image. Such as the distance, position, and reason behind the picture.

3. I would try to better my rules of composition.

4. I would still find certain subjects and photograph them and shape them so they fit the rules of composition.

5. I believe mergers is one of the easiest to achieve.

6. I believe either balance of rule of thirds is one of the hardest.

7. Mergers, I know it usually has to do with something being cut out of the image, however there is also different types of mergers.

Academics Shoot

                                              

                                               Mergers




                                                      The top of her forehead is cut off.



                                                Balance

   



                                  Here is a calm man reviewing his work while he strikes his pose.



                                                 Lines



                                               Here the composition perfectly displays lines.


                                          Rule of Thirds




                              "Learn to fly" reads a banner atop of the Akins library at the entrance. Slightly off       center to create the golden ratio effect.

                                              Framing



   The security guard walks the halls to keep Akins High safe. The walls create a frame around him.



                                              Simplicity

                   The professor instructing her class with the simple white board behind her.

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Favorite



Amazing, explosive, and captivating. This image shows a very spectacular image in which the student is experimenting. Notice near the bottom of the image lines are being portrayed.

Frame

Here the students gather around a cloud framing the eerie smoke.

Best Action/Emotion

The students get together and form a sense of unity.

Best Story

In this activating image you can clearly see that both the students are very much intrigued in the scientific experiment.

Thursday, September 26, 2013

Avoiding Mergers


I chose this one for mergers because the building's sides are cut off.

Frame


The firefighters create a human frame around the injured firefighter.

Balance


Both of the towers look equal in height and stand out from the rest of the buildings.

Lines


This image was taken at a certain angle that makes the building have a line pattern all across the side.

Rule of Thirds


Here the twin towers are in the golden ratio, toward the mid-right.

Simplicity


Alone and in smoke, here the towers are in clear visibility.

Friday, September 20, 2013

Great Black and White Photographers Part 2


  • Dorothea Lange
  • Birth Date: May 26, 1895
  • Death Date: October 11,1965
  • Columbia University 
  • Place of birth: Hoboken, New Jersey
  • Lange is famous for photographing unemployed farmers during the Great Depression. 

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Post Shoot Reflection

http://jasminel6.blogspot.com/2013/09/red-metal-happy.html

The locker is all metal which is good.
Also she took a nice picture of her friends being happy.
However her red was surrounded by more pictures which take the focus off of the red vans.
RED


                                                                            Metal



                                                                       Happy

Thursday, September 12, 2013

The Camera


  1. The effect came to be known as the "camera obscura" which is Latin for "dark room". This was the first camera. The hole acted like a lens, focusing and projecting light onto the wall of the dark chamber.
  2. Issac Newton & Christian Huygens perfected the understanding of optics and the process of making high quality glass lenses.
  3. A glass lens, a dark box, and film.
  4. New cameras are very easy to use, just point and shoot. The camera's built-in computer handles focus and exposure so you don't have to.
  5. Light passes through the lens, into the camera, and exposes the film. And guess what? The end result is still a photograph.
  6. Operating modes are the most basic, and essentially tell the camera whether to take pictures or display them. Some cameras only have "on" and "off". Operating modes can usually be found on buttons or dials on the camera body.
  7. To attempt to blur out the background, camera will try to use the fastest available lens setting (aperture).
  8. To freeze motion, camera will use the highest shutter speed possible.
  9. If the subject is somewhat off-centre, the auto-focus may be fooled. You have probably seen this effect many times before. A half-press will tell the camera that you're almost ready to take a shot and to be prepared, triggering the following things to happen
  10. Auto-Flash, In most camera modes, Auto-flash is enabled by default and will automatically fire if the camera thinks it needs more light.
  11. Disabled Flash, no flash. There are many cases where you may not want flash at all. The mood of the photograph can sometimes be more dramatic when the natural light is used.
  12. Too much light and the picture will be washed out. Not enough light and the picture will be too dark. A good photograph depends on calculating the exposure settings that will give the film the "right" amount of exposure.
  13. It will be dark.
  14. The term "stop" is used in every aspect of photography to represent a relative change in the brightness of light.
  15. 1
  16. 2
  17. It has more light.
  18. It has less light.
  19. Before light reaches film, it must pass through an opening called an "aperture". The aperture is like a pupil, you can control the aperture by setting the "Aperture Opening".
  20. The longer exposures ( like 1 second ) give much more light to the film than a 1/1000 of a second exposure. So even though the number may look bigger, don't be deceived. 

The Camera Parts


Aperture - An opening, usually circular, that limits the quantity of light that can enter an optical instrument.
Shutter - A mechanical device for opening and closing the aperture of a camera lens to expose film or the like.
Exposure - The total amount of light received by a photosensitive surface or an area of such a surface or an area of such a surface, expressed as the product of the degree of illumination and the period of illumination.
Depth of field - The range of distances along the axis of an optical instrument, usually a camera lens, through which an object will produce a relatively distinct image.
F-stop - The setting of an adjustable lens aperture, as indicated by an f number.
Focal length - The distance between an object lens and its corresponding focal plea in a telescope.

Flash button - It gives out a sudden burst of light when pressed.
Menu button - When pressed it goes to the menu which allows you to see all the options.
Settings button - When pressed it will go to the settings options which will help you change the settings of the camera.
AF point selection button - When pressed it will focus on the object you are trying to take a picture of.
Playback button - When pressed the button will lead you to the pictures you have taken.





Masters of Black and White Photography



                                                                     Dorothea Lange
         
           

                                                                  Harry Callahan

                                                               
                                                                         Brassai
                                                               

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Best and Worst photo

I believe this one is my best photo. The computers are neatly aligned and create a sense of organization.



I chose the bottom one as my worst picture because the model was in a strange pose. And the angle wasn't the best one either.