
Wednesday, May 14, 2008
Wednesday, May 7, 2008
photo essay decision
Thursday, April 3, 2008
Glossary
Architectural Photography – Architecture photography is the capturing of angles, shapes, perspectives of buildings and structures, accentuating the lines and angles of the building.
Bridge – In Bridge you should CUT the junk, RATE the rest and LABEL the best, as well as adding any information about the photograph in the description field as necessary.
Caption – Every picture needs a caption! The first sentence should be about something obvious in the picture, something the reader could come to the conclusion of just by looking at it. The 2nd sentence should be something the reader wouldn’t know by looking at the picture, such as so-n-so came in 1st place in this race followed by so-n-so#2.
Dominant photo – The dominant photo is the main photo in a layout. The only photo or box that the eyeline can run through.
Effects of shutter speed – Faster shutter speeds freeze action while slower shutter speeds can’t capture it as well but has the advantage of letting more ambient light in without the use of a flash.
Eyeline – The eyeline is the line above or below the middle of a layout that the entire layout revolves around, meaning nothing can cross it, with the exception of the dominant photo.
Internal Margins – Internal margins are used so that the layout it even around all edges and isn’t “funky” looking.
Panning – Panning is used when the subject is moving across you or sometimes towards you, but it is the act of moving with your subject to catch a blur behind the subject but have the ending motion at the shutting of the shutter to capture the subject in focus and as sharp as possible.
Pica – The pica is used as a measurement in layouts equally 1/6 of an inch. Used in columns in layouts to help keep things separated and prevent large white spaces on a page.
Portrait photography- Formal portraits are set up and are not capturing a candid moment, the subject usually looking at the camera and posing with a set up background, such as a backdrop or posed setting.
Sports and Action Photography – Sports Photography can have either safety shots nad or money shots, such as the winning goal in soccer or the last second taken at the finish line of a race with the runner’s arms in the air as they run through the ribbon. Sports are typically shot at a high Shutter speed to freeze action.
Spread- The spread is the draft before the design is put onto the computer and turned into a layout. The spread must follow all the rules such as the eyeline and photo and caption rules.
Zone focus – Zone focus is typically used in sports photography when the photographer focuses on a specific zone such as a basket ball hoop area or the net for volleyball and when the action is in that specific zone the photographer is already focused and snaps the shot as soon as he sees the shot he wants.
Friday, March 28, 2008
Action Photography
Shutter Speed-Shutter Speed is how fast or slow the "door" opens and faster SS's freeze action, and slow SS's don't capture as much action but allow more ambient light in, eliminating the use of flash, (in some cases)
Panning- Panning is when the photographer moves with their subject, trying to capture a blur behind the subject but still holding the subject sharp and in focus when the shutter closes.
Waiting for the Pause-Waiting for the pause is when the photographer knows there is going to be a certain action shot they want and they use zone focus and waits for the specific desired shot.
Wednesday, March 26, 2008
Austin Architecture
2. Surroundings
3. Surroundings
4. Angles
5. Angles and shapes
6. Light
7. Light, angles
8. Light, angles
9. Surroundings, light
10. Angles, Surroundings
11. Patterns, angles
12. Surroundings, Angles
13. Angles, light
14. Angles, light
15. Angles, patterns
16. Angles, details, patterns