Thursday, September 19, 2013

Assignment #3 - HighKey/LowKey

This assignment is basically two assignments in one. Treat it as such and it will be easier to break down.

Have I taught you the bracketing procedure yet? No? Ok, don't freak out and see if you can figure out what I'm asking here. If you can't figure it out, don't freak out and plan on learning a LOT next week in class.

Enjoy your weekend.

You will shoot high-key and low-key images. What is high-key? The majority of the image (95%+) will be tones of light gray to white. It will help you to think of shooting white objects placed on a white background. So, then the opposite of high-key is low-key right? Think of low key as dark gray-ish to black objects. Shoot your dark objects placed on a dark background. You might need a tripod/beanbag for these shots.

For both of your shots you will want to pay close attention to the background. Don't let stray light/objects ruin your clean shot. Also it helps to isolate the objects by getting close. Take a look at the examples below.

You will want to shoot both of your high-key and low-key shots using the bracketing technique that we learned. Go from very very VERY underexposed all the way to very very VERY overexposed for each of the shots...both high-key *and* low-key.

Using the extreme bracketing you will find that buried somewhere in those images is a nearly perfect exposure. That will be your starting point. We will take those good exposures into post-production in the studio.

Here are some examples:















Yes, this is an assignment that I even give to my basic black and white high school film class. Here's the proof...



Things you will definitely want to be paying attention to:

Focus - make 'em sharp!

Light - will make or break the entire assignment. Move the light around the objects if you are shooting indoors...move the objects around into different light if you are shooting outdoors.

We will lecture and show examples of this in class. This WILL BE an assignment you will want to go back and re-shoot a few times. Don't consider doing it wrong the first time a failure...consider it good practice.

Requirements:

Shoot in RAW
Shoot in Color
Shoot using Manual Mode
Bracket the living heck out of these shots
Shoot using Manual Focus
Shoot images that are interesting to look at

Blog: One post containing two high-key and two low-key images, also put some examples of the exposures that your camera told you were 'correct'.

Write a little about what you learned.

Due Date: Tuesday, September 24th.

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Facebook and Copyright

Listen to this interview posted on Soundcloud. You may think twice about what you post.

LINK HERE


Photography Philosophy

Here's something for you to try to wrap your heads around.

LINK HERE.


Sunday, September 15, 2013

13 Years Later

I made these four negatives in October of 2000. I was in New York City on business and had some time to kill. I had been photographing the city as much as I could and decided I wanted to go across the bridge into Brooklyn and make this panorama.

There are clearly some serious development issues, but looking back at them I am actually glad that they are there. For me it adds to the sentimentality of the image and I genuinely like them.

Please never throw anything away. I may have thrown these in the trash after I saw how badly they were developed (by myself BTW...). Keep it all. You never, ever know.


Thursday, September 12, 2013

Frog Photography

It seems like there's an easier way to take a photo of a frog in the middle of the air.

LINK HERE.


Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Assignment #2 - Numbers

Assignment number two. It's really your first real REAL assignment. Kick some tail.

Here are the requirements:

You will make 100 images. No more...no less.
You will make your first frame contain the number zero (0).
Your second frame will contain the number one (1).
Your third frame will contain the number two (2).
Can you guess what your fourth frame will contain? Yep, a number three (3).

Rinse and repeat.

You will end up with 100 images, starting with number 0, ending with 99.

THESE MUST BE SHOT SEQUENTIALLY...NO CHEATING!

Remember, no deleting, no re-shooting numbers, if you make a mistake on the exposure, go on to your next number. Fix your exposure for the next number before shooting (duh).

I want you to start setting your white balance correctly in the camera. You have not been taught this yet but we will go over it in class. Also this assignment must...repeat...MUST be shot on Manual (M). We will have several lectures about exposure to teach you just what and how your camera is doing what it needs to do.

DO NOT TAKE THIS ASSIGNMENT LITERALLY. Be creative in how you represent the numbers you will shoot. Bonus points if you photograph them in braille. Extra bonus points if you can photograph 99 Bigfoots (Bigfeet?) for the final exposure. DO NOT drive you all over town. DO NOT go walking up and down the street looking for addresses that work. You can shoot this assignment within the comfort of your own home. There are easily 100 sequential numbers in your house.

Due on your blog on Tuesday, September 18th.

I will NOT allow you do to ANY POST-PROCESSING FOR THIS ASSIGNMENT. Post the SEVEN most unique images.

Quote for the day:

"Photoshop is a crutch for those who are too lazy to get it right in the camera."
I said this, it is my quote. If you quote me, attribute me. If you don't quote me I will be sad.

Good luck!

Some examples...











Death From Minecraft

CLICK HERE

Thursday, September 5, 2013

Aperture and Shutter Speed Video

That last lecture is a lot to grasp...yes I know...it's difficult to make complex things simple. The only way I know to truly understand the relationship between ISO, Shutter-speed and Aperture is to just go out and shoot and practice and make mistakes and do it all again.

If you would like another point of view, here is a pretty good video about it. It's 15 minutes long and I can't argue with anything that's presented. Plus he drives a BMW, has a falcon that catches fish for him, dresses nice and is kind of cute. It also has some pretty good graphics and hopefully it'll make sense. Have your camera out and ready to go along when you watch this.


Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Assignment #1 - Scavenger Hunt

Ok gang, this first assignment is designed to get you used to using your camera, understand it's functions and really, most importantly, to have some fun.

I want you to follow these instructions for this assignment. Following instructions with exactness is crucial to many of the things we will do in photo. It is a very process-intense thing to do all of this right, so pay attention and you'll do fine.

1. Take your camera and set it on 'P'.

2. Try and find the following objects to photograph: tree, bird, dog, car, cat, platypus, friend, mom, dad, sky, floor, hand, something red, something green, something scary, something funny.

3. Try to mix it up with your shots. Get close, get closer, get REALLY close. Let the camera focus before you take the picture. Take several views of each object. You don't pay much more to take a million shots instead of just one...so why not play with your angles, the point of view, the close-ness, the far-ness, etc... Don't you DARE just take one image. I will smack you if I see you starting off being a lazy photographer.

4. Get at least 30-50 shots of whatever it is you have found. It is NOT important that these images are perfect works of art. These images are PRACTICE! These images will give us some files that we can work with next week to teach you how to upload your images to your portable hard-drives, how to set up your blogs, etc... Something to work with is better than nothing to work with, so be sure you get something in your camera.

5. DON'T FORGET TO BRING YOUR CAMERA/MEMORY CARD/CARD READER TO CLASS NEXT WEEK! This is really important...if you don't have your images to class then the assignment is LATE and your grade will suffer. Not only that, but if you don't have your images with you then you won't be able to follow along with me as I do my demo.

6. Open your instruction manual read it and play with the various settings on the camera. Learn it's controls as much as you can. You don't have to understand everything, just the basics for now. We will go over in class in a very detailed manner everything you will need to know. For now just the basics are good. This will be the only assignment you ever shoot on 'P'. The rest of the shooting will be on 'M'. If you are really ambitious you can set your camera on 'M' and mess around with it.

7. If you are REALLY ambitious, start over from the beginning and re-photograph what you shot at first. You might be surprised at what you learned and how much better the images turn out.

DONT WORK ON THE IMAGES UNTIL WE GET BACK NEXT WEEK...BUT...THIS IS WHAT WILL BE DUE.


TO COMPLETE ASSIGNMENT #1 YOU MUST DO THE FOLLOWING BY TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10TH.

1. Post three of your your favorite, UNPROCESSED images from all of your shooting done for Assignment #1 to your blog.

2. Process the same images in Lightroom, make them as good as you possibly can, and post to your blog.

3. Process the same images AGAIN in Lightroom, this time make them as ugly as you possibly can, ignore everything I ever told you about making an image good, and instead make it so ugly I want to puke. Post to your blog.

4. Write what you learned, what you did, something to let me know you are a thinking being on your blog. Extra points for a Haiku.

All three images (and their different variations), should be posted in ONE SINGLE BLOG POST...the title of which shall be: Assignment #1 - Scavenger Hunt 


Kodak and Bankruptcy

The author of this story mentions many things that I have already talked about and WILL talk about many times through the term.

READ IT HERE.


















So, who is on Instagram? I'm @btnpshr

I promise I won't shoot any photos of my cats...or my frothy foam on top of a mug of cocoa.

Sunday, September 1, 2013

An Awesome Site

So, let's see who is paying attention this weekend. Please e-mail me your blog URL's and I will add a roster to the right of the blog page so we can all click on each others blogs for the critiques and super easy viewing.

E-mail them to: sladekimberly@gmail.com

In the meanwhile, while you are sitting around this weekend with absolutely nothing to do except for dream about how fantastic the upcoming semester is going to be, you can look at this website.

It has a great title...one that you will not be able to wear thanks to this class. It's called...

YOU ARE NOT A PHOTOGRAPHER

Enjoy!