Wednesday, January 20, 2016

Close-Up Portrait Assignment

Content:

Close up images of the face. The face goes off the edges of the frame.

Composition:

The face becomes line and shape. Pay attention to how the lines and shapes divide the space. Focus on interesting features of the face, eyes, mouth and nose could be emphasized in the composition.

Technical:

Lighting should flatter the skin or create a mood. Use a  large aperture setting such as 2.8 for a short depth of field or use the portrait mode setting.

I enjoyed this project because it was different from what I'm use to. I struggled with getting up as close as I wanted and still keeping it in focus. I started with the regular lens but realized I wasn't getting as close up as I could, so I switched to the Macro lens. Another thing that was a little difficult is that I had my model outside in the sun. Although the lighting was great, it was hard for her to look into the sun. So I didn't get all of her eyes because she was squinting. And sometimes the sun would even make her skin somewhat shiny. 




Friday, December 4, 2015

Evaluation (self reflection in blog with examples from shoot)




This photoshoot was a lot of fun because I really enjoy panos. I like how they cover more distances so you can really see where the photographer was and it feels like your standing right there to. For this photoshoot I hiked a mountain right before sunset to try and get the different colors of the sky. Unfortunately the day I did it there was no really orange sky or purples or pinks like most Arizona sunsets are. By I still like the intensity of the sun in each picture. 

Tuesday, November 24, 2015

Evaluation (self reflection in blog with examples from shoot)








Here are a few examples of architecture from Jerome. I feel pretty proud of my work because I feel that I found some interesting types of architecture. I like how they look run down and almost spooky. What I really appreciate about them is that there is nature growing through the ruins. And in the last picture I really like how you can see the reflection of the clouds through the broken glass.

Friday, October 23, 2015

Evaluation (self reflection in blog with examples from shoot)

For this shoot I tried to model after Sam Hessamian. In his photoshoots he gets different angles of the models faces which I tried to mimic. In the first photo I did more of a straight on angle but showing more of one side of her face. In the second photo I got down lower to get a different angle. In it I included her legs and more of her upper body. And in the last photo I did a straight down angle of her face. This angle also showed some of her legs and upper body. I like how by just changing the angle it changes the intensity of the photo. In the second photo, my model looks happy and just enjoying the day. But when I change the angle to the third photo it makes her look angry and focused. I also really liked how in the first photo the wind made her hair fly up a little and add some dynamic to the photo. 


Tuesday, October 20, 2015

Black and White Photography

                       Sam Hessamian
I choose this artist because I enjoy his style of black and white. It is classic with a touch of grunge. Each picture seems to have an interesting story behind it and draws the attention and curiosity of the viewer. I also really enjoy how in each photo the models makeup is very heavy and dark. It draws attention to it and brings out the whites in their eyes. Each photo is intense and interesting. These are some of the reasons on why I have choose this photographer to try and imitate for my black and white photoshoot. 



Wednesday, September 23, 2015

Unit 4: Blog Entry

Research and write a paragraph summary about four 20th century photographers of your choice. Each photographer needs to have a paragraph written about them each. You are to include two images of work from each of the four photographers (research online) with each summary. 
Here are some photographers from which you can choose.  
  • Henri Cartier Bresson
  • Ansel Adams
  • Edward Weston
  • Jerry Uelsman
  • Minor White
  • Alfred Stieglitz
  • Eugene Atget
  • Man Ray
  • Walker Evans
  • Cindy Sherman

Man Ray
Man Ray
Born on August 27, 1890, Man Ray (Emmanel Radnitzky) was an American Visual artist. During his career he allowed few details of his early life or family background to be known to the public. He even refused to acknowledged that he ever had a name other than Man Ray. He wished to disassociate himself from his family background, but their tailoring left an enduring mark on his art. Later in 1918, he produced his first significant photographs. Man Ray started making objects and developed unique machanical and photographic methods of making images. In Montparnasse, he became a distinguished photographer. Man Ray reinvented the photographic technique of solarization. He also created a type of photogram he called "rayographs", which he described as "pure dadaism". He later died in Paris o November 18, 1976 from a lung infection. 
Man Ray
Edward Weston
Edward Weston was a 20th-century American photographer. He has been called "one of the most innovative and influential American photographers.." He was born in Highland Park, Illinois. As a present for his 16th birthday, Weston's father gave him his first camera, a Kodak Bull's-Eye #2.  And in the April of 1906, the magazine Camera and Darkroom published a full page reproduction of his picture. He later enrolled in the Illinois School of Photography to follow his passion. Years later Weston agreed to allow Mather, a new friend he had met, to become an equal partner in his studio. For several months they took portraits that they signed with both of their names. This was the only time in his long career that Weston shared credit with another photographer. By 1948 Weston was no longer physically able to use his large view camera due to Parkinson's disease. That year he took his last photographs. His final negative was an image he called, "Rocks and Pebbles, 1948". Weston died at his home on Wildcat Hill on New Year's Day, 1958.
Edward Weston
Minor White

Minor White was an American photographer, theoretician, critic and educator. He combined an intense interest in how people viewed and understood photographs with a personal vision that was guided by a variety of spiritual and intelletual philosophies. White was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota in 1908. His grandfather, George Martin, was an amateur photographer and gave White his first camera in 1915. In late 1937 White decided to move to Seattle. He purchased a 35mm Argus camera and took a bus trip across country toward his destination. And later in 1941 three of his photographs were accepted by the Museum of Modern Art in New York for inclusion in their "Image of Freedom" exhibition. In April 1942 White was drafted into the United States Army. White spent the fist two years of World War II in Hawaii and in Australia, and later he became Chief of the Divisional Intelligence Branch in the southern Philippines. After the war, White moved to San Francisco in July and lived with Ansel Adams for several years. While there Adams taught White about his Zone System method of exposing and developing photographs, which White used extensively in his own work and later insisted that his students learn it as well. Later in his career he continued to explore how people understand and interpret photography and began to incorporate techniques of Gestalt psychology into his teachings. On June 24, 1976, White died of a second heart attack while working at his home.
Minor White



Walker Evans
Walker Evans
Walker Evans was an American photographer best know for his work for the Farm Security Administration documenting the effects of the Great Depression. Evans was born in St. Louis, Missouri in 1903. He took up photography in 1928 around the time he was living in Ossining, New York. In 1941, Evan's photographs and Agee's text detailing the duo's stay with three white tenant families in southern Alabama during the Great Depression were published as the groundbreaking book Let Us Now Praise Famous Men. In 1945, Evans became a staff writer at Time magazine. Evans died at his home in New Haven, Connecticut, in 1975.
Walker Evans




Wednesday, September 2, 2015

Unit 3: Blog Entry 2

Blog Entry
On your blog site, have examples of people, places, and things (three images of each), with the rule of thirds grid drawn over them.
www.kodak.com (Links to an external site.)
 (see tip #7 “Move it From the Middle”)

 Discuss how the rule of thirds is used in each photo.

iphonephotographyschool.com
The rule of thirds is used in this photo by placing the people on the left side of the image instead of the center. 







cchavezdigitalphoto.blogspot.com
In this image the person is placed on the right. But it is similar as the first image since it is slightly off center. 







iphonephotographyschool.com
Again the off center technique is used in this image as well








Mrs. Knapik's
In this photo the photographer lined up the statue of Liberty with the right vertical line. 







thephotographicangle.co.uk
This image lines up the subjects on the right most vertical line.











photographymad.com
This image is similar in that it uses the rule of thirds grid to line up the subject with the lines.










photographyandsurrounding.blogspot.com
This image uses the off center technique and lines up the subject with the lines of the gird.












Jim Zuckerman
Again with off centering the subject and lining it up with the grid of the rule of thirds.











stepbystep.com
This image lines up the boat with the left vertical line and in a way some what off centers the subject even though most of it is in the center.