Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Project I, update and critique

Some updates to this project:

All due on Thursday 1/28
  • Never mind the flicker! We'll just use Bridge for critique.
  • At critique time, all your images must be on your class computer.
  • Edit your images down to top 10-15 to show to the class for critique. Filter and flag them accordingly. Please review your choices with instructor today in class (1/26)
  • 5 of the above images must be refined in Photoshop using the skills as we've covered them in class. These include:
  1. Tonal range curves
  2. Brightness curves
  3. Contrast curves
  4. Local adjustment strategies (dodge and burn, etc.)
  5. Sharpening layer
  • Label all layers
  • Turn in 10-15 files into the drop box. They should all be .psd. Five of them should have the adjustments.
  • Only correctly labelled files will be graded: (Lastname_project#_file#.psd). Use batch rename in Bridge to make this easier.

Sunday, January 24, 2010

Food for Video Thought

Its time to reserve your equipment now. All your footage / clips need to be shot/generated by March 11 (the last class before spring break). This will give you ample time for editing/reshooting/producing. We will talk about story-boarding and planning over the next few weeks.

Remember that you can use video cameras from the Sanford Media Center. Also acceptable: if your camera phone does video, that's a low-fi option, but make sure you use good production techniques (some kind of stabilization like a tripod or beanbag support). Also, you can create a video completely out of still images (photos, drawing, etc.). Using something like photo-to-movie (which we have) is a neat tool for this.

Get creative!

All of these come from the One Minute video site. You guessed it... your video project will clock in at 1-minute. Check out these links to get you going with some possible approaches. Others can be found at the site (link located on the bar to the right)... some ranging from profound to clever, to downright odd.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Resolution Slides

File Types
  • PSD; Photoshop file. Native to Photoshop, the optimal file type for Photoshop work
  • Tiff; Tagged Image File Format. Most universal, widely supported file type. Can support layers and wide functioning in Photoshop. Lossless compression (no loss of quality with file size reduction)
  • Jpeg; Joint Photographic Experts Group. Common image type from digital cameras, widely used on internet for photographs, due to small file size. Excellent for web use. Lossy compression; varying degrees of quality loss and file size reduction. Limited editing headroom.

Monday, January 18, 2010

Project I

Final Images Due 1/28; Images uploaded to flickr.com by class time; Layered photoshop files to drop box.

All images must be shot by Tuesday 1/26

Plan to shoot 50-100 images. Edit down to top 5 to turn in.

Choose one of the following topics:
  1. In search of human emotion. Capture the four archetypal emotions photographically, in a way that conveys the power of these emotions. Sad / mad / glad / scared.
  2. The decisive moment. Taking a cue from the famous street photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson, create a group of images that operate within the decisive moment. Put yourself right in the crux of the moment, when time seems to slow down and see if you can nab those elusive events, gestures, expressions that express volumes.
  3. Create one photograph per minute for a whole hour (or more). Basically you have one minute to find, compose, shoot and move on... (If you're wondering, I *will* be checking those time stamps!). Where does this bring you, visually? Find an interesting place to begin the exercise.
Some useful links:

Podcast 2

Podcast 1