Thursday, March 31, 2016

3/31-4/1: UNDERSTANDING MANUAL CAMERA WORK

Manual Adjustments:Aperture and Shutter Speed

Please watch and take notes on both videos below:
Manual Settings Video
Manual Settings Video 2


Manual Adjustments:Aperture and Shutter Speed
http://cybercollege.com/tvp012.htm
http://www.picturecorrect.com/photographytips/208/aperture_fstops_camera_settings.htm

F-Stops and Shutter Speed Hints

Please take detailed notes in your own words on the top two reading assignment. You will using the material you learn this week on the cameras. Use the cameras simulators below when you are done.

Camera simulator:
http://www.photonhead.com/simcam/shutteraperture.php

http://www.kamerasimulator.se/eng/?page_id=2

http://dryreading.com/camera/index.html

htthttp://camerasim.com/camera-simulator/

3/31 & 4/1: INTRODUCTION TO DSLR CAMERAS

To begin understanding a DSLR camera, you will want to know the what the basic camera components are, how they function, and how it takes a picture. Take notes as you read.

Use the link below to label your DSLR camera diagram:

Use the link below, and go to the "Digital SLR Camera Controls on the Top" section
to label the camera LENS diagram:

Click on the link below to see how a DSLR camera operates to take a photograph.

Thursday, March 24, 2016

3/24 & 3/25: GRAYSCALE TIPS & HOMEWORK DUE 3/29 & 3/30


Please take notes from the following websites for tips on taking black and white photos.
By the way, if you have not made a new folder on your desktop for your GRAYSCALE picture, please do so!
Grayscale Homework is  DUE 3/29 & 3/30. You will shoot the following for your assignment.
  • 12 pictures focusing on natural light (sun and moon) shadows
  • 12 pictures involving man-made shadows
  • Titled: Grayscale_Shadow_CS2 (These will be in color still!)
  • HIGHLIGHT THE NUMBERS OF YOUR BEST 1-3 IMAGES!! 

3/23 - 3/24: CONVERTING TO BLACK & WHITE IN PHOTOSHOP

Please take notes (I will be checking your notes!) as I go over the following techniques for converting images to black and white in Photoshop CS6.

The techniques are:
1. Black and White Adjustment Layer
2. Converting to grayscale
3. Hue/Saturation adjustment layer
4. LAB Color Method
5. Gradient Map
6. Channel Mixer

You are required to utilize and know all of the above mentioned adjustments for converting an image from color to black and white. All black and white adjustments are covered in this article: http://photo.tutsplus.com/tutorials/post-processing/7-black-and-white-photoshop-conv ersion-techniques/ 

Monday, March 21, 2016

Museum Artwork Description

Ansel Adam's Moon and Half Dome from Yosemite National Park, 1960


3/21: GRAYSCALE: REPETITION, VALUE, AND EMPHASIS ASSIGNMENT

For your next assignment you will shoot images that will be changed into black and white images.  You will focus on:
  • REPETITION or PATTERN -repetition of an art element w/some variation for interest
  • VALUE - having a range of lights and darks from white to black
  • EMPHASIS - creating a center of interest
You will go off campus Tuesday or Wednesday (?) and need to be back 15 minutes before the end of class. You will be submitting your best 24 images, so you will want to take at least 75 pictures. Before your photo shoot plan what will you take pictures of and where? Be sure to consider lighting too. When you return, you will submit a contact sheet. DO NOT CHANGE THEM INTO GRAYSCALE. WE WILL DO THAT NEXT CLASS. 
  • Title your contact sheet of 24 images: GrayscaleCS1 (These will be in color still!)
  • BEFORE YOU PUT YOUR CONTACT SHEET IN GOOGLE CLASSROOM, BE SURE TO HIGHLIGHT THE NUMBERS OF YOUR BEST 1-3 IMAGES!! THEN UPLOAD IT TO GOOGLE CLASSROOM. 

Please click to look at the work of photographer Douglas Ethridge

The following images are a few examples of his work:

 

 


 




Below are a few more  examples of repetition and emphasis.
























Wednesday, March 16, 2016

3/16 & 3/17: A TRIPLE DOZEN OF ONE OBJECT: HOMEWORK DUE: 3/21

A TRIPLE DOZEN OF ONE OBJECT ASSIGNMENT:

  • HOMEWORK DUE: MON. 3/21
  • Submit 3 contact sheets of 12 images each
  • Titled: LastName_FirstInitial_1Objectx36

As a way to really push experimentation, you will take photos one object and submit 36 images of that object. The goal is to make each image unique, and visually interesting. Be sure to pick an interesting object, &/or make the object interesting by being clever and using variety. Change angles, environments, lighting, surrounding objects, image orientation, color schemes, distance from the camera, consider making a social or political statement, etc. Have fun!

Monday, March 14, 2016

3/8 & 3/9: LANDSCAPE EDITING & UNIT COMPLETION. DUE:

FINAL ASSIGNMENT REQUIREMENTS:
  • 12 Photoshop Adjusted Landscapes from four various locations. Save as a contact sheet (3 columns & 4 rows) with the naming convention titled LandscapesAdjusted.
  • You will save your best landscape as the highest quality JPEG. Be sure that you title it LandscapeBest. You can ask for help, if you need help deciding which is your best.
  • Always use the naming convention. Example: 3-KingL-Landscape Adjusted 
  • You will be dropping these 2 items in the correct classes folder on my server.
  • DUE: (Per4) 2/26 & (Per1) 2/27
Today through Wednesday, you will be editing your Landscape photos in Photoshop. First, pick your best 12 landscapes overall and place them in a folder titled Landscape Adjusted. Next, open up each one and touch them up in Photoshop to make the pictures look even better. For each photo, be sure to File>Save As (JPEG) when you are done editing. Below are some tutorials that will give you ideas on how to adjust landscapes. Please work through each one with a few separate landscape photos.  
These next two tutorials are a little advanced. If you would like to try them, you can, but are not required to.


You can also do any of the following adjustments we talked about in class:
  • Get rid of power lines, garbage cans, and other distracting objects using Clone Stamp (S) and Copy/Paste. 
  • Adjust the horizon line using Free Transform (Command-T).
  • Crop your picture as needed.
  • Change the overall color using color balance. 
  • Adjust the warmth or coolness of your photo using Image>Adjustments>Photo Filter.

Thursday, March 10, 2016

SUBMITTING TO TATTOO DUE: 3/11

You are required to submit 1 photo (edited) to Tattoo by 3/13. You receive extra credit for any additional photos that you submit.

To submit:
  1. Go to the SC website: http://learn.shorelineschools.org/shorecrest/tattoo/submissions
  2. Now scroll down and fill out the submission form. 
  3. You will receive an email back. BE SURE TO ATTACH YOUR PICTURE WHEN YOU RESPOND TO THIS EMAIL. DO NOT DRAG YOUR PICTURE INTO THE REPLY.

3/8 & 3/9: BASIC PHOTOSHOP TUTORIALS

Here are a few links for basic Adobe Photoshop CS6 tutorials.  There is a lot to Photoshop. You will not need to know all of the tools at once, so do not be overwhelmed.  At the same time, the best way to learn is to do, so give it a go. You will not have enough class time to go through all of these, so you may want to view them outside of class.

After going through tutorials 1-3, try the various tools in your own images:

For more advanced tutorials, you make want to look at tutorials 6-11.  Before you start these tutorials please make sure you download two different portraits and at least one landscape photo.

Tuesday, March 1, 2016

3/1 & 3/2: 10 RULES OF PHOTO COMPOSITION (AND WHY THEY WORK)

10 rules of photo composition (and why they work)
| Photography Tips | 12/04/2012 16:33pm
5 Comments
In photography, it’s not just what you shoot that counts – the way that you shoot it is crucial, too. Poor photo composition can make a fantastic subject dull, but a well-set scene can create a wonderful image from the most ordinary of situations. With that in mind, we’ve picked our top 10 photo composition ‘rules’ to show you how to transform your images, as well as offered some of our best photography tips from the experts who do it on a daily basis.

10 rules of photo composition (and why they work)
Don’t feel that you’ve got to remember every one of these laws and apply them to each photo you take. Instead, spend a little time practising each one in turn and they’ll become second nature. You’ll soon learn to spot situations where the different rules can be applied to best effect.
Photo composition doesn’t have to be complicated. There are all sorts of theories about the ‘Rule of Thirds’ and more complex ‘Golden Mean’, for example. But if you pay too much attention to strict formulae, your photos will lose any kind of spontaneity.
In the real world, you’ll be working with a wide range of subjects and scenes, and this requires a more open-minded approach. What works for one photo won’t necessarily work for another.
The key thing is to understand how all the decisions you make about composition can affect the way a shot looks and how people perceive your photos. The way you frame a shot, choose a focal length or position a person can make all the difference (check out our Photography Cheat Sheet series for quick fixes to some of these problems).
Technical know-how is very important in photography, of course, and even in some aspects of photo composition. But to take great shots you need visual knowledge too. Here are 10 key things to look out for…

10 rules of photo composition (and why they work)


Photo Composition Tip 1: Simplify the scene

10 rules of photo composition (and why they work)
Image copyright Jure Kravanja
When you look at a scene with your naked eye, your brain quickly picks out subjects of interest. But the camera doesn’t discriminate – it captures everything in front of it, which can lead to a cluttered, messy picture with no clear focal point.
What you need to do is choose your subject, then select a focal length or camera viewpoint that makes it the centre of attention in the frame. You can’t always keep other objects out of the picture, so try to keep them in the background or make them part of the story.
Silhouettes, textures and patterns are all devices that work quite well in simple compositions.

Why it works…

10 rules of photo composition (and why they work)

Photo Composition Tip 2: Fill the frame

10 rules of photo composition (and why they work)
Image copyright Jure Kravanja
When you’re shooting a large-scale scene it can be hard to know how big your subject should be in the frame, and how much you should zoom in by. In fact, leaving too much empty space in a scene is the most widespread compositional mistake (learn how to Replace boring skies in Photoshop). It makes your subject smaller than it needs to be and can also leave viewers confused about what they’re supposed to be looking at.
To avoid these problems you should zoom in to fill the frame, or get closer to the subject in question. The first approach flattens the perspective of the shot and makes it easier to control or exclude what’s shown in the background, but physically moving closer can give you a more interesting take on things (see our list of Digital camera effects from A-Z).
Why it works…
10 rules of photo composition (and why they work)

Photo Composition Tip 3: Aspect ratio

10 rules of photo composition (and why they work)
Image copyright Andy Lea
It’s easy to get stuck in a rut and take every picture with the camera held horizontally. Try turning it to get a vertical shot instead, adjusting your position or the zoom setting as you experiment with the new style. You can often improve on both horizontal and vertical shots by cropping the photo later.
After all, it would be too much of a coincidence if all your real-life subjects happened to fit the proportions of your camera sensor. Try cropping to a 16:9 ratio for a widescreen effect, or to the square shape used by medium-format cameras.
Why it works…
10 rules of photo composition (and why they work)

Photo Composition Tip 4: Avoid the middle

10 rules of photo composition (and why they work)
Image copyright Piriya Pete Wongkongkathep
When you’re just starting out, it’s tempting to put whatever you’re shooting right in the centre of the frame. However, this produces rather static, boring pictures. One of the ways to counteract this is to use the Rule of Thirds, where you split the image up into thirds, both horizontally and vertically, and try to place your subject on one of these imaginary lines or intersections. This is an overrated approach, though.
Instead, move your subject away from the centre and get a feel for how it can be balanced with everything else in the scene, including any areas of contrasting colour or light. There are no hard and fast rules about achieving this kind of visual balance, but you’ll quickly learn to rely on your instincts – trust that you’ll know when something just looks right.
Why it works…
10 rules of photo composition (and why they work)

Photo Composition Tip 5: Leading lines

10 rules of photo composition (and why they work)
Image copyright Fernand Hick
A poorly composed photograph will leave your viewers unsure about where to look, and their attention might drift aimlessly around the scene without finding a clear focal point. However, you can use lines to control the way people’s eyes move around the picture.
Converging lines give a strong sense of perspective and three-dimensional depth, drawing you into an image. Curved lines can lead you on a journey around the frame, leading you towards the main subject.
Lines exist everywhere, in the form of walls, fences, roads, buildings and telephone wires. They can also be implied, perhaps by the direction in which an off-centre subject is looking.
Why it works…
10 rules of photo composition (and why they work)

Photo Composition Tip 6: Use diagonals

10 rules of photo composition (and why they work)
Image copyright Jure Kravanja
Horizontal lines lend a static, calm feel to a picture, while vertical ones often suggest permanence and stability. To introduce a feeling of drama, movement or uncertainty, look for diagonal lines instead.
You can need nothing more than a shift in position or focal length to get them – wider angles of view tend to introduce diagonal lines because of the increased perspective; with wide-angle lenses you’re more likely to tilt the camera up or down to get more of a scene in.
You can also introduce diagonal lines artificially, using the ‘Dutch Tilt’ technique. You simply tilt the camera as you take the shot. This can be very effective, though it doesn’t suit every shot and is best used sparingly (see our 44 essential digital camera tips and tricks).
Why it works…
10 rules of photo composition (and why they work)

Photo Composition Tip 7: Space to move

10 rules of photo composition (and why they work)
Image copyright Max Earey
Even though photographs themselves are static, they can still convey a strong sense of movement. When we look at pictures, we see what’s happening and tend to look ahead – this creates a feeling of imbalance or unease if your subject has nowhere to move except out of the frame.
You don’t just get this effect with moving subjects, either. For example, when you look at a portrait you tend to follow someone’s gaze, and they need an area to look into (check out our Free portrait photography cropping guide).
For both types of shot, then, there should always be a little more space ahead of the subject than behind it.

Why it works…

10 rules of photo composition (and why they work)

Photo Composition Tip 8: Backgrounds

10 rules of photo composition (and why they work)
Image copyright John Powell
Don’t just concentrate on your subject – look at what’s happening in the background, too. This ties in with simplifying the scene and filling the frame. You can’t usually exclude the background completely, of course, but you can control it.
You’ll often find that changing your position is enough to replace a cluttered background with one that complements your subject nicely (find out how to Fix background distractions in 3 steps). Or you can use a wide lens aperture and a longer focal length to throw the background out of focus.
It all depends on whether the background is part of the story you’re trying to tell with the photo. In the shot above, the background is something that needs to be suppressed.
Why it works…
10 rules of photo composition (and why they work)

Photo Composition Tip 9: Creative with colours

10 rules of photo composition (and why they work)
Image copyright Jure Kravanja
Bright primary colours really attract the eye, especially when they’re contrasted with a complementary hue. But there are other ways of creating colour contrasts – by including a bright splash of colour against a monochromatic background, for example. You don’t need strong colour contrasts to create striking pictures, though (find out How to conquer high contrast with auto-exposure bracketing).
Scenes consisting almost entirely of a single hue can be very effective. And those with a limited palette of harmonious shades, such as softly lit landscapes, often make great pictures.
The key is to be really selective about how you isolate and frame your subjects to exclude unwanted colours.

Why it works…

10 rules of photo composition (and why they work)

Photo Composition Tip 10: Breaking the rules

10 rules of photo composition (and why they work)
Image copyright John Powell
Photo composition is a little like a visual language – you can use it to make your pictures pass on a specific message. However, just as we sometimes use the written word to create a deliberately jarring effect, we can do the same with photos by breaking with standard composition conventions.
Doing it by accident doesn’t count, though! It’s when you understand the rules of composition and then break them on purpose that things start to get interesting. It’s often best to break one rule at time, as John Powell does in the image above.
Just remember: for every rule we suggest, somewhere out there is a great picture that proves you can disregard it and still produce a fantastic image!

Why it works…
10 rules of photo composition (and why they work)









READ MORE
99 Common Photography Problems (and how to solve them)
The 10 Commandments of Landscape Photography (and how to break them)
Photographers Rights: the ultimate guide
6 photo editing steps every photographer should know
Famous Photographers: 225 tips to inspire you

Posted on Thursday, April 12th, 2012 at 4:33 pm under Photography Tips.
Tags: , , , , , ,

OFF CAMPUS LANDSCAPE PHOTO SHOOT & HOMEWORK (P2: 3/3) & (P3: 3/4)

  1. LANDSCAPE OFF CAMPUS PHOTO SHOOT : (PER 2: TH. 3/3) & (PER 3: FRI. 3/4)
  2. LANDSCAPE HOMEWORK DUE: (PER 2: TH. 3/10) & (PER 3: FRI. 3/11)
 Pick at least two scenic location where you can take pictures, one for your homework assignment and one for your off-campus photo shoot. This should be a place with water, mountains, trees, or a combination of all of the above. I would recommend Carkeek Park, Kerry Park, or Richmond Beach. For your off-campus photo shoot, know where you are going beforehand, bring your camera and arrange your transportation.
  • One of these photography sessions must be during sunset or sunrise.
  • You will shoot at least 24 pictures at each location. 
  • You will turn in the landscapes as contact sheets at the end of class. They should each have 24 pics (4 columns & 6 rows). Be sure to create a folder on your desktop titled LANDSCAPES.
  • BEFORE YOU PUT YOUR CONTACT SHEET IN GOOGLE CLASSROOM, BE SURE TO HIGHLIGHT THE NUMBERS OF YOUR BEST 1-3 IMAGES!! THEN SUBMIT IN GOOGLE CLASSROOM.
  • Title the accordingly:
    • Off-campus photos  = LandscapeCS3
    • Homework = LandscapeCS4
TIPS:
  1. Make sure each shot has a large depth of field. In other words, make sure even the background objects are in focus.
  2. In each shot make sure you have foreground, middleground, and background objects.
  3. Most Landscape shots will have water, trees, and mountains.
  4. Change angles and move all around the location.
  5. Shoot horizontal and vertical landscape pictures.
  6. Do not center the horizon. Place it in the upper or lower third.
  7. Look for lines on the ground or even in the sky.
  8. Use tripods as needed.
  •  

3/1 & 3/2: PREP FOR FIRST OFF CAMPUS PHOTO SHOOT

In order for you to go off campus this Thursday (P2) and Friday (P3), please be sure that you are in good academic standing with your Photography work, and all of your forms are in.  IF YOU ARE NOT IN GOOD STANDING, &/OR YOUR FORMS ARE NOT IN, YOU WILL NOT BE ABLE TO LEAVE CAMPUS. BE ON THE LOOKOUT FOR A REMIND TEXT OR AN EMAIL FROM ME. I MAY BE NOTIFYING YOU IF YOU ARE NOT IN GOOD STANDING.

Please check that you have the following done:
 

FORMS:
  • Academic Plan
  • Fee (preferred, but not required to go off campus)
  • Off-Campus Permission Form 
  • Driver/Passenger Form 
  • Volunteer Driver Checklist Form (Drivers ONLY)
  • Copy of License (Drivers ONLY)
  • Copy of Insurance (Drivers ONLY)
  •  
PHOTOGRAPHY WORK: 
  • Day 1 questions
  • Week 1 pics
  • Comp1CS1 (in class work
  • Comp2CS2 (Due 3/1 & 3/2)
  • Landscape CS1 (mid-winter break homework)
  • Landscape CS2 (mid-winter break homework)