Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Landscape Preview

PART 1

Another element to consider is the sky in your landscape.

Most landscapes will either have a dominant foreground or sky – unless you have one or the other your shot can end up being fairly boring.
If you have a bland, boring sky – don’t let it dominate your shot and place the horizon in the upper third of your shot (however you’ll want to make sure your foreground is interesting). However if the sky is filled with drama and interesting cloud formations and colors – let it shine by placing the horizon lower.
Consider enhancing skies either in post production or with the use of filters (for example a polarizing filter can add color and contrast). This is my favorite tip on landscape photography.


PART 2

This is one thing that can be completely lost in even the most inspiring cityscape. Look for reference points in the foreground of your shot to define the scale of the city behind. Perhaps a boat in the harbor, or a stream of cars heading towards the city. Any of these will add both scale and dimension to your image. This is my favorite tip for cityscapes.





PART 3

Apocalypse Now by Miles Morgan


Frozen Forest by Evgeni Dinev


Deep Red by Marco Carmassi



PART 4
Some equipment i would need would be a lens capable of zooming in pretty far or even a wide angle... and a tripod.

I would go take this at night or during sunset by auditorium shores park or barton creek.


Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Composition, Close Up, and 14 Hour Diary


PART 1



Leading Lines



Rule of Thirds



Contrast



Balance



Light as the Subject



Circular Composition



Frame in a Frame



Rhythm




Vertical Lines



S-Curve


PART 2

Macro Circular Composition


Macro Vertical Lines


Macro Leading Lines


Macro Rule of Thirds


Macro Frame in Frame


Macro Rhythm


Macro Contrast


Macro S-Curve


Macro Balance


Macro Light as the Subject







Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Magazine Review and Photographer Biography


  • You can waist less electricity by turning the air conditioning off during the day
  • Not really it was free maybe
  • Ads, information, articles, pictures
  • Something about austin homes and how to live green
  • The houses for sale

  • Annie Liebovitz 
  • portraits with Vanity Fair and Rolling Stone magazine ,Her photographs are intimate, and describe the subject. She was unafraid of falling in love with the people she photographed.
  • Cameras, tripods, light rooms etc.
  • portraits
  • she has a very different way of using photography 



Motion Blur


Moving in Front 



Moving Across



Free Choice



Monday, October 7, 2013

Lightroom Notes


  • RAW gives you more than jpeg
  • you can fix highlights, exposure, light balance if you think the picture is wrong
  • can correct exposure stops easily
  • its better to be over exposed than under exposed so its easily to recover 
  • some cameras can shoot RAW and jpeg 
  • best for photographers and one you know how to use it makes life a lot easier


Thursday, October 3, 2013

RAW Camera Format and Photography


Advantages of RAW


  • Higher in dynamic range
  • More control over image
  • Correctable

Disadvantages of RAW

  • Waiting for photo to be processed  on computer

Advantages of JPEG

  • Sharper
  • Processed by camera
  • Smaller image

Disadvantages 

  • Lower in dynamic range

1. Using RAW doesn't retain any data and is stored in the camera without compressing... meaning it takes up more space.

2. Once processed on a computer you can manipulate white balance, contrast, highlights, shadows and colors.

3. Not all cameras have RAW, and you will need a higher memory SD car, and you can convert RAW to JPEG but not the other way around. 

4. Most of a photographers time goes in editing, if your not willing to take the time to make a photo better than RAW isn't good for you.


Tuesday, October 1, 2013

First Free Shoot



Matthew is posing for the camera while i get a shot of him and his skateboard




Matthew fell on his butt after this shot but i liked it because of the angle




Matthew grinned the rail and did a back side 180 off


I was really happy with this project because it was fun and i got to better myself at photography.

I got to many photos of mergers and not enough with my subjects face.

I learned how to shoot better photos and with better quality





Monday, September 23, 2013

Free shooting plan




My subject will be someone skating 

My hope is shooting it at south park meadows

Outdoors

Somewhere around late morning or noon

The lighting will probably be sunny if not pretty close to it

A tripod and a camera and maybe a fish eye lens if possible

I will try and get around 5-10 photos

Friday, September 13, 2013

Sunny 16 Rule

We should learn to use the sunny 16 rule because everyone who is a photographer should know the basic rules of photography and to have knowledge of exposure and the camera functions.

You should use 1/100 iso to start with

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Aperture, Shutter speed, ISO

Aperture

1. The opening of the lens
2. The smaller the aperture the bigger the opening, the bigger the aperture the smaller the opening
3. Aperture Affects depth of field,and your focus 
4.  3.5-36 

Shutter Speed

1.
Day time
a) Dunking contest-1600
b) Food eating contest -800
c) Rock climbing - 400
d) Booth - 600
e) Dj - 600
f) Diamonds performance - 1600

  Night time
a) Dunking contest -1200
b) Food eating contest - 400
c) Rock climbing - 200
d) Booth - 400
e) Dj - 400
f) Diamonds performance -1200

2.
  • Aperture Priority - you put the aperture and the camera automatically adjusts the shutter speed
  • Shutter Priority - you put the shutter speed and the camera automatically adjusts the aperture
  • Manual - you have to set both aperture and shutter speed

3.
Bulb-1/4000

ISO

1. the pictures will come out less blury 

2. having lower iso will make it come out more clear

3. having higher iso will make it come out less clear 

4. 100-6400 iso


200 iso


3200 iso


Camera Slim


F4 - best with 1/125th of a second.
The background is blurred out, but is more in focus. Still cant tell what the background is.

F5.6 - best with 1/60th of a second.
The background is still blury  but coming into focus, you can see shapes and colors.

F8 - best with 1/60th of a second.
The background became a little darker, but is still blurred. 

F11 - best with 1/60th of a second.
You can now see what the background is, which are buildings. Their is just a little blur.

F16 - best with 1/30th of a second.
The background barely has any blur. 

F22  - best with1/15th of a second.
Now the background is more focused, the two people are a little blurry.

Slower shutter speeds means the  subject will start to blur out. the photographer can use a higher shutter speed. i think the lowest shutter speed a camera man would use is 1/125th of a second or 1/100th of a second.


Monday, September 9, 2013

Composition Shoot



Background


Creating depth


Cropping


Framing


Leading Lines


Patterns


Rule of Thirds


ViewPoint





Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Photo Composition




1. Rule of thirds











2. Balancing Elements













3. Leading Lines


















4. Symmetry and Patterns (repetition)














5. Viewpoint

















6. Background














7. Create depth


















8. Framing












9. Cropping













10. Mergers and avoiding them