Cyanotype (History of Photography): Photographic printing process that creates a cyan-blue print by using two chemicals called ammonium iron(III) citrate and potassium ferricyanide.
Narrative Photos: By using focal clues, I created a story that people can connect to in just one photo.
Sequential Narrative: I took multiple photos and made a story by connecting them.
Blur Motion: By decreasing the shutter speed, we can capture motion with a lower amount of shots per second.
Stop Motion: By increasing the shutter speed, the camera can take pictures faster and make movement look still.
Panning: By moving the camera with the moving subject, we can make the subject look still while the background is blurry.
Hockney Montage: By taking multiple photos from different angles on the same subject, we are able to stitch them together to create one final image.
White Balance: In this activity we were asked to set our cameras on auto and photograph white sheets of paper in different lighting. The purpose of this was to see how light changes the color of the paper. As you can see, shadows make the color cooler and bright light makes the color warmer. When photographing my portrait i need to change the kelvin so my white balance is correct for my subject.
Portraits: For this project we learned how to adjust white balance and reviewed rules of composition in order to make our portraits unique.
Art Show: One thing that surprised me was the amount of people walking around and supporting East Arts. One thing that I enjoyed was the performances in the foyer.
Choice Project: I came up with these ideas to show the feeling of being carefree and forgetting all of your troubles. I hope the viewer feels happy when looking at my images and connects to them.