Monday, March 30, 2015
Clone Tool Exercise
Select a photo that you have taken and use the Clone Tool to manipulate the photo in some way. You may want to add items, or make them disappear. Post a before and after pic.
Photo-Retouching
Today we will work with a couple of tools to help improve minor imperfections in our photos.
Download the 2 photos below, retouch them, and upload the before and after pictures to your blog.
Download the 2 photos below, retouch them, and upload the before and after pictures to your blog.
Use the Clone tool to remove the blemishes from the guy's face.
Here is a video to help you...
Use the Red Eye tool to correct the red eyes....
Tuesday, March 24, 2015
Out of Class Assignment - Environmental Portrait
An Environmental Portrait is a personal portrait the you take of someone "on location", or in a setting where they live, work, rest, or play.
According to the website digital-photography-school, environmental portraits:
According to the website digital-photography-school, environmental portraits:
- give context to the subject you’re photographing
- give points of interest to shots (something you need to watch as you don’t want to distract from your subject too much)
- help your subject relax
- often give the viewer of your shots real insight into the personality and lifestyle of your subject
Your assignment is to take a portrait of someone in thier environment. You can use any camera, and do not need to keep track of exposure settings. The main point is to be creative as you take the portrait.
Here are some examples of this style of photography:
Dorothea Lange
http://www.historyplace.com/unitedstates/lange/
http://www.historyplace.com/unitedstates/lange/
Valery Mosley
Ami Vitale
Lauren Greenfield
W. Eugene Smith
AP Images Critique
Today you will choose a photo from AP Images to critique. Follow the example below to do your critique.
1. Use the Snipping tool to upload the photo to your blog.
2. Add the link from the AP site to your blog.
3. Paste the description of the photo from the AP site to your blog.
Description: Ultra-Orthodox Jewish men pray ahead of the Jewish New Year at the Western Wall, the holiest site where Jews can pray in Jerusalem's old city, Wednesday, Sept. 4, 2013. Israelis happily welcomed the Jewish New Year late Wednesday despite uncertainty and turmoil brewing on both its northern and southern borders. (AP Photo/Sebastian Scheiner)
4. Answer the following:
5. Write a Critique. Use the Critique Guide in the link above.
1. Use the Snipping tool to upload the photo to your blog.
2. Add the link from the AP site to your blog.
3. Paste the description of the photo from the AP site to your blog.
Description: Ultra-Orthodox Jewish men pray ahead of the Jewish New Year at the Western Wall, the holiest site where Jews can pray in Jerusalem's old city, Wednesday, Sept. 4, 2013. Israelis happily welcomed the Jewish New Year late Wednesday despite uncertainty and turmoil brewing on both its northern and southern borders. (AP Photo/Sebastian Scheiner)
4. Answer the following:
- Who was the photographer?
- What country and city was the photo taken in?
- What event was photographed?
- Describe the event that was photographed.
- Why is the event newsworthy? Why is it important to us?
5. Write a Critique. Use the Critique Guide in the link above.
Upload Adjustment Layers - Desaturate - Levels
Upload your Adjustment Layers work from last class.
The original color version
The Desaturated version (Black and White)
The Levels adjusted version
The original color version
The Desaturated version (Black and White)
The Levels adjusted version
Friday, March 20, 2015
Assignment - Hue/Saturation and Levels Adjustment Layers
Post your examples of your work with Photoshop Adjustment layers. See the examples below to help guide you:
Here is my original color image
Here is the Desaturated (BW) Image
Here is the image adjusted for levels.
Shadows 21, Midtones .91, highlights 231
Levesls adjusted toward the shadows
Shadows 156, Midtones .81, Highlights 171
Levels adjusted towards highlights
shadows 15, Midtones .16, Highlights 65
Photoshop - Adjustment layers
Today I will demonstrate how to use Photoshop Adjustment Layers.
We will practice the following in class:
Do one of the following:
For Hue-Saturation (Converts to Black and White)
1. Click the New Adjustment Layer button
at the bottom of the Layers panel, and choose Hue/Saturation
2. Move the Saturation slider all the way to the left
3. Click ok
Here is a video showing how to do it.
For Levels (Adjusts Contrast in your picture)
1. Click the New Adjustment Layer button
at the bottom of the Layers panel, and choose Levels
2. Move the Shadows, Midtones, and Highlights Sliders to adjust the range of contrast in your image
3. Click ok
Here is a video showing how to do it.
This link will take you to a description of using Levels in Photoshop. The photo in the example is in color but it works the same in black and white.
We will try this for ourselves in class and post the results on our blog Friday.
We will practice the following in class:
- Convert a picture from Color to Black and White using the Hue/Contrast Adjustment layer
- Adjust Levels using the Levels Adjustment layer
Do one of the following:
For Hue-Saturation (Converts to Black and White)
1. Click the New Adjustment Layer button
2. Move the Saturation slider all the way to the left
3. Click ok
Here is a video showing how to do it.
For Levels (Adjusts Contrast in your picture)
1. Click the New Adjustment Layer button
2. Move the Shadows, Midtones, and Highlights Sliders to adjust the range of contrast in your image
3. Click ok
Here is a video showing how to do it.
This link will take you to a description of using Levels in Photoshop. The photo in the example is in color but it works the same in black and white.
We will try this for ourselves in class and post the results on our blog Friday.
Monday, March 2, 2015
Composing Your Photograph Using the Rule of Thirds
Today you will take pictures using the Rule of Thirds. You will need to post 3-5 examples of the Rule of Thirds to your blog. For each example write an explanation of how the rule of thirds was used in each picture.
The rule of thirds is probably the most often referenced photography rule of composition. It is all about subject placement within the frame.
Imagine that your picture space is divided into thirds both horizontally and vertically, like a tic tac toe grid.
The rule of thirds is probably the most often referenced photography rule of composition. It is all about subject placement within the frame.
Imagine that your picture space is divided into thirds both horizontally and vertically, like a tic tac toe grid.
The photography rule of thirds tells us to align our subject with one of the points where those lines cross. That means our subject is one third of the way “into” the picture space – from either the top or bottom, and from either the left or right. And that means it’s not in the middle.
Here is an example of the rule of thirds for a landscape photo. The focus is on the land area rather than the sky so the bottom two-thirds of the photograph are filled with land and the top third is sky.
Here are additional links explaining and demonstrating the Rule of thirds.
http://digital-photography-school.com/rule-of-thirds
http://learnprophotography.com/rule-of-thirds
http://www.ultimate-photo-tips.com/photography-rule-of-thirds.html
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