Friday, October 31, 2008

Light and Shadow

My Photograph shows Light and Shadow. It shows light and shadows because you can see the darkness and lightness in the picture outlining me on the wall. The picture shows depth. This photo also shows texture on the wall. You can tell that the wall is rough.

Texture


My photo shows texture. It shows texture because you can tell that it is prickly just by looking at the image. You can clearly see the pricks on the tree.

Lines


My photo shows lines. You can see horizontal and vertical lines in the building in the background and you can see diagonal lines in the grass. This photo also shows rule of thirds.

Rule of Thirds


My photograph shows Rule of Thirds. the sky takes up more then half of the photo while the busier part in at the bottom. The bottom part has cars and buildings in it and they are not dead in center of the photo.

Center of Interest



My Photo shows center of attention. As soon as you look at the picture your eyes automatically go to the tree and then the rest of the photograph.

Thursday, October 16, 2008

Photo District News Article

The Girl Project Lets Teens Reveal Their World

This article talks about something called "The Girls project" For this project Kate Engelbrecht (a New York-based photographer) sends a Kodak camera to any girls ages 13-17 in America that want to do this project. The girls then photograph things that are meaningful and special in their lives. The goal of this project is to get photos from 5,000 girls of different backgrounds and cultures in America and then sort the pictures out into a book and traveling exhibition.

This topic is worthy of having an article about it because many people, adults especially, have a certain image about young girls. This project is to show what girls are truly. The girls in the project are sending in photos of nature, text and much more.

I found this topic really inspiring. If these girls can take a camera and express who they are without words and without media. These girls are expressing themselves in an interesting way. I would love to do that. Its a way of opening up and finding yourself.

I think this exacally what I want in a photograph. I want meaning in my photos. I don't want to take a picture of a tree just because I think its pretty. I want to take pictures knowing there is more to that then just the object, I want to know that there's a feeling, mood or reason behind that photo.


CLICK HERE TO READ THE ARTICLE

Graphic Design Link

For our Cyber Arts assignment we were asked to find a informative, educational or inspiring website. For my assignment I chose to write about OUTSPOKEN KATE I chose this website because it is a informative, educational and inspiring website. This website has tutorials for design programs (like photoshop and paint shop pro), tips on designing websites and pre-made graphics. When looking through this website I learned a number of different skills. I also got amazingly inspired and got a bunch of new ideas. If you would like to learn about coding, graphic programs or web designing I recommend you check out outspoken-kate.com


Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Composition in Photography - Mood

Mood is the feeling a picture invokes. A photographer can portray their mood or a mood they want the viewer to feel by photographing different elements. Specific elements evoke different feelings. For example an image of the sun and a blue sky can convey warmth and happiness. Fog might convey anxiety or mystery. One person may feel something different when seeing a picture then another depending on who they are.

Here are some examples:

By Arie V.D WoldeM

Composition in Photography: Selective Focus

What is Selective Focus?
Selective Focus is when you put emphasize or isolate one main part of the photo by using depth of field. One thing in the picture stands out while the background is either blurred or dull. To create selective focus you can use larger aperture to reduce the zone in front and behind of the main focal point.

Here are some examples.

(c) Veronika Vasilyuk



(c) Susan Fox



IMAGES FROM SHUTTERSTOCK
ARTICLE ON SELECTIVE FOCUS

Thursday, October 9, 2008

LOGO ASSIGNMENT

For our 3rd Cyber Arts Assignment we were asked to design a logo that would represent our company. This is my final result with both my topography and pictography.

My company's name is "Divine Designs". I chose this name because it goes with the butterfly very well. I chose to use a butterfly to represent my company. I chose a butterfly because butterflies are graceful, elegant, colourful and pretty. My company specializes in Graphic design, Website Design, Website Coding, billboards, posters and much more. We believe in taking our works to great heights.

My logo consists of straight and curved lines. The curved lines give my logo a soft feeling while the straight lines give it strength and balance. The shape of the butterfly is an outline of an actual butterfly and none of the structures of the butterfly is distorted. The colours I used for the butterfly are black, white, red, pink, orange and yellow. These colors stand for elegance, passion, simplicity, ambition, sweetness and warmth. For the text I used A normal font and warped it so it curved into a smiley-face shape. I added some lines coming out from the D and the E in Divine Designs and positioned them so they went around the butterfly. At the end I added a drop shadow, completing my logo. I am very proud of my logo.

Sunday, October 5, 2008

Chess Piece

For our second assignment in Cyber Arts we were asked to draw a chess piece using Proportion, Value and Movement. I chose to draw the Queen.

First I drew the chess piece in the middle of the paper tilting to the left. I then added triangles, swirls, circles, squares and lines (in different thicknesses) to form the background. In the background I divided the page into two, with the chess piece in the middle. On one side I added two striped triangles and added three to the other side, I made one triangle bigger on the right part so it would balance the drawing.

After that I added value to both the chess piece and the background which added weight to the drawing. In the background I added mostly White, gray, white, gray patterns to the lines, triangles and swirls. I shaded the sides of the small circles in the corners so they would look 3D.

For the proportion I used an actual chess piece, measured the main parts and multiplied the measurements by three so the image of the chess piece would be enlarged. This is how I made sure the proportion was accurate.

There is also movement in my drawing. The triangles and swirls draw your eyes around the drawing while the diagonal lines move your eyes across. After drawing the picture I took a photo of it and uploaded it onto the computer. Then I opened the image onto Adobe Photoshop and adjusted the brightness and contrast, thus creating my final outcome.