Wednesday, November 18, 2015
what I learned today
Today I learned that you can capture different angles of peoples faces and it will capture different light. Also we took shots of their whole body or face. You could see how different their faces look from the different angles. Some of them looked the same so their faces didn't change much.
Monday, November 2, 2015
Richard Avedon
this picture show love for what they are holding. For example the fist image shows a lady with two elephants and seems like she enjoys being next to them. In the second picture there is a couple who seem like they are very happy together and they enjoy being next to each other. They just seem very joyful. In the last picture you can see a lady holding a monkey and it seems like they are matching.The lady looks like shes telling the monkey that he is very cute.
Thursday, October 22, 2015
Mary Ellen Mark
Mary Ellen Mark
The obsessions we have are pretty much the same our whole lives. Mine are people, the human condition,life."
William Klein
William Klein was born in New York city in 1928, he studied sociology while enrolled at the city college of New York. His family was poor Jewish immigrants. 1999 Klein was awarded the 'medal of the century' by the royal photographic society in London.
Gordon Parks
This shows a picture of a an African American women and a little girl who seem to be standing outside of a store and has a specific entrance. That says "colored entrance" this was the way it was for the blacks in the deep south. Gordon Parks would be pleased if this photograph still has utility because its an evidence of a history for African Americans.
Dorothea Lange
Dorothea was an influential American documentary photographer and photojournalist, this photograph is called the migrant mother. She was 32 and she had been living on frozen vegetables of surrounding fields and birds that children had killed.The lady's face stands out between the bowed heads of her sons.
Monday, October 5, 2015
Diane Arbus
A photograph is a secret about a secret. The more it tells you the less you know. Diane says that her favorite place to go is somewhere she has never been. She always thought that photography is a naughty thing to do and it was one of her favorite things about it, and when she first did it she says it felt very perverse.
Tuesday, September 22, 2015
Cambridge in color
Cambridge in color is basically just giving us information about camera exposure, understanding exposure,the exposure triangle which is aperture ISO and shutter speed. The rest of this is just shutter speed and it gives you a chart of typical examples.
Monday, September 21, 2015
Irving Penn
This is a photograph by Irving Penn. He is known for his iconic fashion, portrait and still life images which appeared in Vogue, ranks as one of the most foremost photographers of the 20th century.
Thursday, September 17, 2015
Ansel Adams
-The color on this picture focuses more on the rose because since the picture is black and white the most light part is the rose.
-The texture is soft mostly on the rose.
-The contrast is mostly on the rose because it doesn't have background.
So mostly this picture has a focus on the rose there isn't anything around except for where the rose was placed. It seems to be placed on a wooden table. It has a dark background as well.
-The texture is soft mostly on the rose.
-The contrast is mostly on the rose because it doesn't have background.
So mostly this picture has a focus on the rose there isn't anything around except for where the rose was placed. It seems to be placed on a wooden table. It has a dark background as well.
Wednesday, September 16, 2015
Weegee by Weegee
I find Weegee very strange and different. I like how he is his own boss and doesn't have to deal with others. His pictures grab my attention because they are in the moment and he doesn't need models.
Tuesday, September 15, 2015
is always me, available at any time. When you lose a loved one, you suffer. But if you know how to look deeply, you have to realize that his or her nature is truly the nature of no-birth, no-death. There is manifestation, and there is the cessation of manifestation. You have to be alert to recognize the new manifestations of one person. But with practice and effort, you can do it. pay attention to the world around you, to the leaves and the flowers to the birds and the rain. If you can stop and look deeply, you will recognize your beloved manifesting again and again in many forms. You will release your fear and pain and again embrace the joy of life.
Thursday, September 10, 2015
Tuesday, September 8, 2015
Thursday, September 3, 2015
Tuesday, September 1, 2015
F/Stops
f/stops are a bit more confused because the numbers appear a bit arbitrary. The reason that both the halving and the smaller numbers mean more lighter light things make sense is that the f/stop is a ratio. The ratio is between the diameter of the aperture in the lens and the focal length of the lens. The focal length is generally measured in millimeters, so we'll stick with those as our unit of measure. On a 50mm lens, f/2 is saying that the diameter of the aperture is 25mm. The ratio is: 50/25 = 2. That seems pretty straightforward. A good question might be, what is the area of that aperture? Well, the aperture is usually a set of five to fifteen blades which form a roughly circular hole, so we'll use the formula for the area of a circle, which as I'm sure you'll recall is &pi * radius2. For π I'll use 3.14159265. On our 50mm lens, the aperture at f/2 has a diameter of 25mm which is a radius of 12.5mm. The area of the aperture is thus π X 12.52, or 3.14159265 X 156.25, or 490.9 square millimeters.
f/stops are a bit more confused because the numbers appear a bit arbitrary. The reason that both the halving and the smaller numbers mean more lighter light things make sense is that the f/stop is a ratio. The ratio is between the diameter of the aperture in the lens and the focal length of the lens. The focal length is generally measured in millimeters, so we'll stick with those as our unit of measure. On a 50mm lens, f/2 is saying that the diameter of the aperture is 25mm. The ratio is: 50/25 = 2. That seems pretty straightforward. A good question might be, what is the area of that aperture? Well, the aperture is usually a set of five to fifteen blades which form a roughly circular hole, so we'll use the formula for the area of a circle, which as I'm sure you'll recall is &pi * radius2. For π I'll use 3.14159265. On our 50mm lens, the aperture at f/2 has a diameter of 25mm which is a radius of 12.5mm. The area of the aperture is thus π X 12.52, or 3.14159265 X 156.25, or 490.9 square millimeters.
Friday, August 28, 2015
Some of the composition rules that we see in this picture are leading lines, background, kind of balancing elements with the band members. Also you can see symmetry and pattern in the sound waves above the band members. This is one of my favorite bands I love their music and the way they sing.The reason the picture is so dark and everything is black and white is because this kind of describes the style of these band members. The name of the band is Arctic Monkeys and the place I found this image is google images. I don't think i could ever get tired of their music. I love alternative rock and it just brings happiness to my ears.
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