I want to tell a story about abuse. However, I want to show a more emotional abuse that isn't always so easy to see until it finally progresses into physical abuse. Hopefully, I can use Photoshop to tell this story through the use of masking and fading different images. I want to first show a picture of a girl (probably me or Amanda *shakes head*) without any masking -- just a regular picture of a regular girl. This will be the beginning and also the "outside looking in" viewpoint of abuse. Basically, I want to use this beginning picture in every picture. To explain, the second picture I take will probably be the start of abuse -- perhaps a look of discomfort and weak body language -- then on top of this image I want to have a faded version of the first picture where the subject is "normal." If all goes as planned, each picture will become worse and with the use of defeated body language and perhaps some makeup for effect. I really want to show anguish and pain through these pictures.
35 mm camera
Seeing Form
Function and Form
Farm Security Administration
Mastering Light
Color Film
Gordon Parks
Fashion Photography
Digital Revolution
What is photography?
Basically, a camera is a ***light-proof box with an opening to let in light and a deceive to focus that light onto a light sensitive material to record an image Lens
Exposure Exposure is when a lens lets light into the camera and projects it onto a light sensitive material
Photographer must begin and end the exposure
Determining which shutter speed and aperture will work for the light -- allows you to set shutter and aperture
Light sensitive material = sensor Pixels Smallest picture element in an image sensor which create the picture Megapixel 1 megapixel = one million pixels Resolution Sharpness and amount of fine detail -- higher the better Memory Card Saves/stores the image -- records the photographs File Formats JPEG: compressed file -- small file which takes all the information and squishes it down RAW: very large uncompressed file -- saves information as it is PSD: uncompressed file -- keeps all layers intact PPI Pixels Per Inch -- print quality *** Print needs to be 300 PPI |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. Archives
May 2015
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