- Photo9 Outline for students who have never taken Photography before
- Photo10 Outline for students who have taken Photo 9 before
- Media Arts 10 Outline for self-motivated students who have taken Photo 9 and 10 before.
- Supply List
- Everyone remember your field trip form and camera for next class.
Sunday, January 30, 2011
Welcome to Photography 9/10
Welcome to the world of Photography. We are going to continue to explore the world around us while learning about Photography. Here is what we plan to do this semester (disclaimer- projects will not always follow this order):
Friday, January 21, 2011
Final Journal Check List
Make sure you have the following in your final journal:
All Photo9&10s Photo9s only Photo10s only
All Photo9&10s Photo9s only Photo10s only
- 9 & 10s Title Page
- Digital Portrait
- Surveillance 1 + Comments
- Camera Vocabulary
- Best of BW Surveillance
- 5 Favorite Photos (any that you like)
- 2010 this year in photos. 2 photos & comments
- 9 Composition Definitions Emphasis and Photo Examples (leading lines, rules of 3rds, framing, repetition, contrast)
- 9s Best of Pin Hole
- 9 Shutter Speed Examples
- 9 Shutter Definitions
- 9 Shutter Speed Your Best
- 9 Elements of Design Examples
- 9 Portrait Examples
- 9 Portrait Best
- 10s Studio Portrait examples of lighting techniques
- 10s Studio Best of
- 10s Aperture Definitions
- 10s Aperture Examples
- 10s Aperture Best
- 10s Panorama- David Hockney
- 10s Panorama Contact Sheet/Best
- 10s Comic Ideas
- 10s Comic Best
Monday, January 10, 2011
Photo 10- Photographic Comic Narrative
Tell a story in photographs and arrange it in a comic strip like series. Your series will consist of 7 or more descriptive photographs to tell your story. Use thought bubbles and narrative description boxes only to clarify your ideas and the actions and thoughts of the characters. Use real people, not dolls or action figures, but you can use inanimate objects as your subject i.e. "the day in the life of an apple". Be descriptive with your imagery. Remember lighting, and depth of field techniques when photographing each image. You will be digitally enhancing your images to manipulate colour. Arrange your images to tell a story. You can add drawings, hand colouring, scribbling, and collage to you comic.
- Brainstorm- your story ideas, write down your narrative, can be in point or paragraph form.
- Storyboard- plan your images in frames. Include a close-up, medium shot and long shot to establish the space.
- Shoot- Photograph your story either digital of BW.
- Download or develop your negatives (scan negatives).
- Digitally enhance the colour and contrast in the images.
- Arrange in a comic-like narrative sequence (can use Comic Life).
- Print or post in your journal/blog.
Photo 9 Elements of Design
Find examples of the Elements of Design in Photography for your journal/blog:
Line, Shape, Form, Texture, Colour
Line
A line represents a "path" between two points. A line can be straight, curved, vertical, horizontal, diagonal, or zigzag. Lines imply motion and suggest direction or orientation. The direction and orientation of a line can also imply certain feelings. Horizontal lines imply tranquility and rest, whereas vertical lines imply power and strength. Oblique lines imply movement, action and change. Curved lines or S shaped lines imply quiet, calm and sensual feelings. Lines that converge imply depth, scale and distance - a fence or roadway converges into the distance provides the illusion that a flat two-dimensional image has three-dimensional depth. A line is an effective element of design because it can lead the viewer's eye. To create more effective photographs actively look for lines and arrange them within your viewfinder to invoke specific feelings.
Shape 2-D
Shapes are the result of closed lines. In photography, shapes can be a color area or an arrangement of flat, 2 dimentional objects within the camera's viewfinder. Some primary shapes include circles, squares, triangles and hexagons. Space is defined and determined by shapes and forms. Light coming from behind a subject can form a silhouette resulting in object that is completely black against a lighter colored background. Silhouettes appear as two-dimensional shapes lacking form.
Form - 3-D
Form refers to the three-dimensional quality of an object, which is due in part to light, and dark areas. When light from a single direction (e.g. our sun) hits an object, part of the object is in shadow. Light and dark areas within an image provide contrast that can suggest volume. Positive space is where shapes and forms exist; negative space is the empty space around shapes and forms.
Color
There has been a tremendous amount of research on how color affects human beings and some of this research suggests that men and women may respond to colors differently. Color affects us emotionally, with different colors evoking different emotions.
Texture
Describes a surface of an object. Texture can be soft, smoothe, shiney, bumpy, rough, jagged...
Monday, January 3, 2011
This Year in Pictures
It is the beginning of a New Year. We're going to reflect on events that happened throughout 2010 that were where documented with photographs. We are going to take a look at the MSNBC photos of the year together as a class.
View the photos from either site (or both sites)
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/4999736/
or
http://uk.reuters.com/news/pictures/slideshow?articleId=USRTXVJJH#a=1
View the photos from either site (or both sites)
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/4999736/
or
http://uk.reuters.com/news/pictures/slideshow?articleId=USRTXVJJH#a=1
Here's what you do:
- Select your favourite "news" photo from 2010.
- Print or upload to journal/blog.
- Comment why it is your favourite.
- Explain what the event is.
- How does the image document the event? How does the image tell the story?
- Identify the subject.
- What emphasizes the subject and how does it emphasize it? Leading lines, repetition, rule of thirds, contrast, framing?
- Select your favourite New Year's Photo.
- Print or upload to journal/blog.
- Comment why it is your favourite.
- Explain what the event is.
- How does the image document the event? How does the image tell the story?
- Identify the subject.
- What emphasizes the subject? Leading lines, repetition, rule of thirds, contrast, framing.
- What are your New Years' goals and/or resolutions?
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