Friday, September 27, 2013

Photo Composition and 911

Simplicity







the reason why that i chose this picture of this two building of take any picture by the building well look the same  




The Rule of Thirds




i think that this picture looks really more rule of thirds from the one lady of left side be hide other people with the town trees as well






Lines
I see that is Picture from the reflction of the sun deeming down of 4 light line be hide of the light polo and those 2 dark building









Balances




to see really close of this picture you can see that were the stone angle standing there that you look down under it you see people sit or balances on the stone angle statue were the hold on the candile   





Framing

where you can see the two twin towers in this picture in front of it you can see on the left and right there is a half building ,tree of making frame








Avoiding Mergers


In this picture you  the driving golf cart and fireman truck and the blue building and that one tree from all those object if you looked at the sceond picture there still in the same place but only thing that change is the red golf cart







Monday, September 23, 2013

Principles of Design

Balance: is the comfortable or pleasing arrangement of things in art.  There are three different types of balance: symmetrical, asymmetrical, and radial. The human figure is symmetrically balanced; the same on the left and right side. The tree is asymmetrically balanced; its branches are not distributed equally on each side, but their total weight is balanced left and right. The sun is an example of radial balance; all its rays are equal in length from the center.







Contrast: is created by using elements that conflict with one another. Often, contrast is created using complementary colors or extremely light and dark values. Contrast creates interest in a piece and often draws the eye to certain areas. It is used to make a painting look interesting.






Emphasis:  in the focal area of an artwork gives it importance.  An artist may stress some elements of the design over others. The eye of the viewer will focus on the area of emphasis or center of interest first, then take in the rest of the composition. 




Movement: an artwork means the artist is taking viewers on a trip through the work by means of lines, edges, shapes, and colors often leading to the focal area.  Movement is a visual flow through the composition. It can be the suggestion of motion in a design as you move from object to object by way of placement and position.  Directional movement can be created with a value pattern. It is with the placement of dark and light areas that you can move your attention through the format.




Pattern: are made in art when the same shapes or elements are repeated again and again.  Pattern uses the elements of art in planned or random repetitions to enhance surfaces of paintings or sculptures.




Rhythm:  is the repetition of shapes, lines, and forms.  Rhythm is a movement in which some elements recurs regularly.  Like a dance, it will have a flow of objects that will seem to be like the beat of music.




Unity: means that all elements in an artwork are in harmony.  Unity brings together a composition with similar units.  For example, if your composition was using wavy lines and organic shapes you would stay with those types of lines and not put in even one geometric shape.



Elements of Art

Line: are marks made by a pointed tool: brush, pencil, pen, etc. Lines can vary in width, direction, curvature, length, or color.



Shape: are formed wherever the ends of a continuous line meet. Geometric shapes such as circles, triangles or squares have perfect, uniform measurements and don't often appear in nature. Organic shapes are associated with things from the natural world, like plants and animals.
                                                            


Color: wheels show the primary colors, secondary colors, and the tertiary (intermediate) colors. They also show the relationships between complementary colors across from each other, such as blue and orange; and analogous (similar or related) colors next to each other such as yellow, green, and blue. Black and white may be thought of as colors but, in fact, they are not. White light is the presence of all color; black is the absence of reflected light and therefore the of absence color.

                                                                    

Value (Tone):  or tone, refers to dark and light; the value scale refers to black and white with all gradations of gray in between.  Value contrasts help us to see and understand a two-dimensional work of art.
                                                               
 
Form: describes objects that are three-dimensional, having length, width, and height.
                                                               

Texture: can be rough, bumpy, slick, scratchy, smooth, silky, soft, prickly--the list is endless.  Texture refers to the surface quality, both simulated and actual, of artwork.
                                                             
  
Space: refers to distances or areas around, between, or within components of a piece. Space can be positive (white or light) or  negative (black or dark), open or closed,shallow or deep, and two-dimensional or three-dimensional. 
                                                                      

Thursday, September 19, 2013

photo manipulation and ethic

i think about the O. J  Simpson is the my opine that the people you took this picture gram trying make this man into a bad person in peresion of him self on world star news paper time magzain



this daily new paper picture right here is not even true what the say about Bill Clinton meet the one man how all americans solders try to kill over hundered time with  Fidel Castro this is all a false mistake

warm up 45 photos

the reason i like tho photo is how the way the color belied into the white fog cloud 

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

40 Greatest Photos Ever

Picture title: Sisters pos for the same photo three separate times, years apaprt




Picture title: A Romanian child hands a heart-shaped balloon to riot poilce during protestes against austerity measures  in bucharest.
















Claude P. Dettloff, October 1, 1940: A line of soldiers march in British Columbia on their way to a waiting train as five-year-old Whitey Bernard tugs away from his mother’s hand to reach out for his father. 







The 1968 Olympics Black Power Salute: African American athletes Tommie Smith and John Carlos raise their fists in a gesture of solidarity at the 1968 Olympic games. Australian Silver medalist Peter Norman wore an Olympic Project for Human Rights badge in support of their protest. Both Americans were expelled from the games as a result.










Australian Scott Jones kisses his Canadian girlfriend Alex Thomas after she was knocked to the ground by a police officer’s riot shield in Vancouver, British Columbia. Canadians rioted after the Vancouver Canucks lost the Stanley Cup to the Boston Bruin

Great Black and White Photographers Part 2

Name: Jane Robert's
birth: 1997
city: London
Education: Private shcool  
Jobs: photograh
Famous work published:
    Fisheye lens-Natural history Museum in london



Name: Mike Parker

Birth: August 4 1901 death: July 6, 1971

City State: New York

Education: Bronx Academy High School

Jobs: photography of American Jazz music Atmosphere

Famous work published: the 2nd famous black African American male how took a picture of the famous jazz atomsphere perison louis Armstrong    

Friday, September 13, 2013

red metal happy





Camera Mode's

6. Auto the will completely control flash and exposure. On most camera this is labelled "auto", on other simply "A". Some cameras.
 Program automatic assist, just point and shoot. Unlike full auto mode, you can usally contorl flash ad a few other camera settings.
7.

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Camera Parts


  1. Aperture In optics, an aperture is a hole or an opening through which light travels.
  2. Shutter is a  device that allows light to pass for a determine period of time, for the purpose of exposing
  3. Exposure is the account of light allowed to fall on each area unit of a photographic  medium
  4. Depth of field is the distance between the nearest and farthest object in the in a scene that appear acceptably sharp in an image 
  5. F-stop a camera setting corresponding to a particular f-number
  6. focal length is distance between the centers of a lens or curved mirror and its focus.        

Camera History

Replacing old-fashioned plastic film, digital cameras capture the images with an electronic sensor called a CCD.

Camera History

A camera is still a camera