Monday, December 19, 2011

SCHOLASTICS TIME!

We need to start thinking about Scholastic's entries!
Juniors: 4 single entries
Seniors: 4 single entries and a portfolio of 8 images that belong together

Register at www.artandwrting.org

-Use proper capitalization/punctation. If you don't know what this means...ask!
-If you have registered before your log in password should be student, if you have never registered, make your log-in password student.
-Upload highest quality images you have!
-Image size: I would say make it as large as you can, the average image size for Super B paper is about 12x18".  The paper itself if 13x19", check your image in Pshop
AP Photo :

Don't forget to go to a gallery or museum to write your quarterly Gallery Review. 2 pages, double spaced.

A couple ideas might include the Harry Calahan show at NGA or  National Geographic Museum exhibit, Polar Obsession or National Portrait Gallery's Taylor Wessing Photographic Portrait Prize exhibit.

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Think outside the box....

Here are some ideas taken from 

Gene Rodman, Montana Photographic Arts

  • Look for lines and angles. Buildings, bridges, and man made objects are geometric and their lines make for interesting images.
  • Patterns and symmetry. There are patterns everywhere and photographing them with a unique perspective can make for interesting images.
  • Light and shadows. The use of light and shadow is what photography is all about. Look for unique ways in which light plays on a landscape or object.
  • Balance. In composition we want a balance between objects in our photograph. If an image is heavily weighted it draws the viewer to that part sacrificing the rest of the image. Similarly, voids in an image can also be distracting. The whole image must work together to keep the viewer engaged.
  • Unique perspective. Most photographs are taken at eye level because we see at eye level. When photographing something low get down to its level. Don't forget to look up or down to see if there is something a little different. I've been known to climb on things to get that different perspective. By shifting to an unusual perspective we immediately make our image unique.
  • Color. The use of color or the lack of it can help make a photograph. The use of complementary colors within an image helps to balance it and is very pleasing to the eye. The opposite can also work if tension is the purpose of the image. Monochromatic (one color) images convey mood and feeling.
  • The silhouette. We end up getting a silhouette when we don't want by shooting a subject that is back lit. The camera's meter reads the bright background and the subject get less than needed exposure. It can still be an interesting photograph if we want to show shape but not detail of an object. Any subject that is lit from behind and has little light illuminating the side facing the camera will be silhouetted.
  • High key/low key. High key images have mostly light tones like a bride in a wedding dress against a white background. They convey a joyous or happy feeling and are typically low contrast images. Low key images have mostly dark tones and express more of a dramatic darker mood. Hard lighting creates drama by hiding detail in shadows.
  • Time. By stopping action we can see things we could not see at normal speed. Everyone has seen the photograph by Harold Edgerton of a bullet stopped in mid flight as it exits an apple. Many camera exposures are faster than we can see and stop the action of our world. By using slow shutter speeds we can also blur our world creating very interesting images, whether it is stars streaking across the sky or water falling over rocks.
  • Water. Water is a subject all its own. Moving water can be stopped or blurred into a surreal image by the photographer's choice of shutter speed. Still water can reflect a whole landscape or a simple form. Even a small puddle can reflect the whole world. Ripples in water distort objects and gives them unique form.
  • Go up close. Just about everyone can improve their photographs by moving a little closer to their subject and filling a little more of the viewfinder. Those who get intimate with their subjects are drawn to macro photography.
  • Try a portrait. Portraits can be of any subject. What makes it a portrait is that it is staged. By staging your photograph you have to give it thought. What is the subject going to be? Where is it going to be? What kind of background? What kind of lighting? What kind of mood? Don't forget your depth of field.
  • Using focal length. Play with your zoom when looking for your photograph. Change from wide angle to telephoto to see if something unique strikes you. This allows you to change perspective without moving.
  • Photograph what excites you. My creativity tanks when I am forced to photograph something that doesn't excite me. When I'm depressed it seems there are no images anywhere. If you find something that excites you you have a better chance to get a good image.
  • Try something new. We never learn anything different if we keep doing the same thing. We are creatures of habit so go ahead, close your mind and open your eyes
What do you think? Have any other helpful tips???

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

PORTFOLIO DAY!!!

Sat, Dec 3: Washington, DC, Corcoran College of Art and Design
10:00am - 2:00pm 



Mark your calender and let's get your portfolios together!

Sunday, October 16, 2011

Contest

Congrats to Erin Daniel for becoming a finalist in DC Fotoweek! Very Exciting! Her work will be hung and she is invited to a special reception where she will find out the prize she has won!!

We still have to contests we can submit to right now, the Arlington Decal contest and the PTA's Diversity is... contest. I'd like to see some submissions soon.

Friday, September 23, 2011

Posts

Please make sure you guys are giving credit to photos that aren't your own. I also would like to see more cross-posts to your classmates.

Also, please comment bellow so that I know you have read this!
-Etten

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Arlington Decal Contest

Okay guys, seriously, one of you needs to win this contest this year! Let's start thinking now about possible good locations to shoot.  DON'T wait till the last minute!!!

Possible locations,
Arlington Courthouse?
An Arlington Fire truck, police vehicle, ART bus, school bus, ect.
Something from the Arlington fair??
Clarendon metro station entrance