History of Photography
You have the images in the correct order but many of the headings are wrong and you haven't named everything. Please correct and complete.
Camera Obscura
This needs to be in your own words.
Camera obscura, ancestor of the photographic camera. The Latin name means “dark chamber,” and the earliest versions, dating to antiquity, consisted of small darkened rooms with light admitted through a single tiny hole. The result was that an inverted image of the outside scene was cast on the opposite wall, which was usually whitened. For centuries the technique was used for viewing eclipses of the Sun without endangering the eyes and, by the 16th century, as an aid to drawing; the subject was posed outside and the image reflected on a piece of drawing paper for the artist to trace. Portable versions were built, followed by smaller and even pocket models; the interior of the box was painted black and the image reflected by an angled mirror so that it could be viewed right side up.
Camera obscura, ancestor of the photographic camera. The Latin name means “dark chamber,” and the earliest versions, dating to antiquity, consisted of small darkened rooms with light admitted through a single tiny hole. The result was that an inverted image of the outside scene was cast on the opposite wall, which was usually whitened. For centuries the technique was used for viewing eclipses of the Sun without endangering the eyes and, by the 16th century, as an aid to drawing; the subject was posed outside and the image reflected on a piece of drawing paper for the artist to trace. Portable versions were built, followed by smaller and even pocket models; the interior of the box was painted black and the image reflected by an angled mirror so that it could be viewed right side up.
I made the camera by making a box with one hole in it and one of the sides was tracing paper.
now I made focal lens to make the image clearer a lens as a magnifying glass at the top then I put that over the hole and its a camera now. This is a little confusing. Perhaps it would be better to say you..... added a tube of paper to the front of the box and put a magnifying glass in the end furthest away from the hole you had made. This projected a crisper image onto the tracing paper.
now I made focal lens to make the image clearer a lens as a magnifying glass at the top then I put that over the hole and its a camera now. This is a little confusing. Perhaps it would be better to say you..... added a tube of paper to the front of the box and put a magnifying glass in the end furthest away from the hole you had made. This projected a crisper image onto the tracing paper.
Focal Length definition
The longer the focal length, the narrower the angle of view and the higher the magnification. The shorter the focal length, the wider the angle of view and the lower the magnification.
How can you make the two sentences below into full sentences that flow together. Don't forget to use capital letters at the beginning of each sentence.
I made a long focal length at the start but everything was unclear so I made it 2 cm shorter and then it was perfect. Everything was alright but the box fell apart after a while because the quality of it, it was good while it lasted.
The longer the focal length, the narrower the angle of view and the higher the magnification. The shorter the focal length, the wider the angle of view and the lower the magnification.
How can you make the two sentences below into full sentences that flow together. Don't forget to use capital letters at the beginning of each sentence.
I made a long focal length at the start but everything was unclear so I made it 2 cm shorter and then it was perfect. Everything was alright but the box fell apart after a while because the quality of it, it was good while it lasted.
DSLR Introduction- Documentation
1.eyecup
2.viewfinder eyepiece 3.LCD monitor 4.MENU Button 5.Playback Button 6.WI-FI LAP 7.access lamp 8.SET Button/multi-controller 9.IOS Speed Setting button 10.quick controller button 11.display button 12.erase button 13.focus point selection 14.live view shooting/movie shooting switch 14.dioptric adjustment knob |
SHUTTER SPEED
What is Shutter Speed? it is the time it takes to take a photo. the sharpness of a picture- this is not correct. Revisit the department website and find the right answer.
What does it control? the sharpness of a picture- this is not correct. Revisit the department website and find the right answer.
What setting should the program dial be on? It should be on TV
What is it measured in? Fraction of seconds
What does it control? the sharpness of a picture- this is not correct. Revisit the department website and find the right answer.
What setting should the program dial be on? It should be on TV
What is it measured in? Fraction of seconds
Where are your shutter speed experiments? Shaking the head and jumping.
LEVITATION
Yowa Yowa
My Response
The point of this task was to make a guy look like he is Levitating by jumping and I took a photo on high shutter speed so it looks as sharp as possible, no blur.
Best, edited images.
Annotate your work.
What ISO did you use
What were the lighting conditions like
What shutter speed did you have your camera on to achieve the best outcome?
What went well, even better if...
What tips would you give to someone about to attempt the levitation images. (Think about camera settings and what the model needs to do / not do)
What ISO did you use
What were the lighting conditions like
What shutter speed did you have your camera on to achieve the best outcome?
What went well, even better if...
What tips would you give to someone about to attempt the levitation images. (Think about camera settings and what the model needs to do / not do)
LEVITATION AT HOME
The lighting isn't good enough for you to achieve the shutter speed you need. Do this again in daylight.
Francesca Woodman
Give a brief overview of Woodman’s life
Born: April 3, 1958 Died: January 19, 1981 Grew up in Boulder but also spent time in ItalyFirst had photography lessons at boarding school in Andover, Massachusetts Had a sense of humour, was fun to be with American Parents were artists Started taking photos at 13 Studied at Rhode Island School of Design (1975-77) Took the photograph in her studio (an unheated room above a dry goods store called Pilgrim Mills), in Providence in 1976 Travelled to Rome in 1979 Moved to New York in 1979 to pursue fashion photography Suffered from depression Committed Suicide in 1981, aged 22 |
This square-format, black and white photograph is a self-portrait of the artist Francesca Woodman. Woodman, wearing a dark dress and knee length boots, occupies an empty interior space with bare white walls. A dark skirting board runs along the base of the wall where it meets the lighter grey concrete floor. The adjacent wall can be seen on the far right of the image and features a window through which light enters the room. With feet firmly planted, right in front of the left, Woodman appears to lunge forward. Her body is oriented away from the camera; her knees are bent, back hunched and arms stretched out gesturing toward the window. Although her feet are in sharp focus, her body from the ankles up is blurred as if in motion, totally obscuring Woodman’s face.
Francesca Woodman intended to create a ghostly imagery and was influenced by surrealism and conceptual art. She creted the ghostly effect by using a longer shutter speed to create a blurry image creating a sense of movement. She wanted us to think that she was a ghost
My Response
In the images I took I had to make Tom look blurred and ghostly. I did this by having a slow shutter speed. I told Tom to move about.
Edit them to black and white.
Aperture
2. Explain what aperture is and what it controls- DO NOT copy and paste this, use the sheet from Monday
3. Explain Depth of field- find an example on the internet that shows the difference.
4. Present three of your own photographs where the composition is the same but each image has a different aperture . You should see a change in the depth of field.
5. Label each image with it's meta data (shutter speed, aperture etc). Remember, you can find this in Bridge.
6. Add other trios of images.
7. Annotate: www and ebi, were you able to capture the difference in DoF, was your composition successful?
3. Explain Depth of field- find an example on the internet that shows the difference.
4. Present three of your own photographs where the composition is the same but each image has a different aperture . You should see a change in the depth of field.
5. Label each image with it's meta data (shutter speed, aperture etc). Remember, you can find this in Bridge.
6. Add other trios of images.
7. Annotate: www and ebi, were you able to capture the difference in DoF, was your composition successful?
COMPOSITION
My teacher handed out a sheet of different tasks to take photos. We got 9 different shapes to take photos of in our playground
Follow the instructions in the attachment to edit your best nine images.
Present the handout next to your nine images on weebly.
Present the handout next to your nine images on weebly.
Annotate: discuss how well you composed your images and controlled the camera (focus, zoom, exposure). Give at least one...WWW & EBI. What are the images below?
COMPOSITION
My teacher handed out a sheet of different tasks to take photos. We got 9 different shapes to take photos of in our playground