Friday, March 6, 2020

What should be done by next Friday before the March Break

1. Writing Bio: good copy 10 marks
2. Writing Setting: good copy 10 marks
3. Writing: Bucket List 10 marks
4. Photoshop: Head swap 10 marks
5. Photo: Flickr set-up, all photos in albums, Make Ms. Chase a contact 10 marks
6. Photo: 3 Head shots in album on Flickr  5 marks
7. Photo: 2 shots Rule of Thirds in album on Flickr 5 marks
8. Photo: 10 First Shoot shots in album on Flickr 20 marks

Macros: These are close-up shots with a focus on an interesting object. Make sure the photos are clear, in focus. have a clean background and are edited before putting onto Flickr.
5 photos Marks 10




Writing Assignment #3

Bucket List : You are to create a point form list of 20 things you would like to see, do, or accomplish before you turn 25. Hand in to Ms Chase, no editing is needed.

Wednesday, February 26, 2020

Photoshop Editing Assignment

Editing Assignment NEW
HEADSWAP IN PHOTOSHOP INSTRUCTIONS  (10 marks)

1. Find/or take photo of a person. If using google to find the image, get the largest size photo possible. ( ie superman, famous model or celebrity) no animals or cartoons.

2. Bring in both photos to Photoshop. Go to IMAGE, ADJUSTMENTS, IMAGE SIZE and change the photos to both be close to the same size. If one is way bigger than the other it will be difficult to do the assignment. While under ADJUSTMENTS, you can also change both photos to BLACK and WHITE.
3. Next go to the SELECTION TOOL, and using the tool, move the tool around the head of one of your photos, then click on EDIT CUT and go to your next photo.

Note: It is probably more interesting to put the student head on the celebrity body, but it does not matter which head goes where. Also if you do not have a head shot that works for the swap, simply go out and take a shot of someone in a similar pose and distance away from the camera.

4.When on the next photo, click on EDIT, PASTE. This will put the head on the page. Then to resize the head, click EDIT, TRANSFORM, SCALE. This will put a box around the photo and allow you to change the size of the head, you can also slightly rotate the head if you go to ROTATE under TRANSFORM tool.
5. Then you want to tweak the image by moving into place with the pick tool, or use the eraser tool to clean up the edges.

Note: SAVING the file: If you need to continue working on the head swap, save as a Photoshop file so you can come back and work on the image. It is always a good idea, to save your edited photos as Photoshop files as a backup in case you need to go back and make changes. However, if you think you are done you can save as a JPEG and then print out the assignment, put your name on it and hand it in.

Criteria for this assignment: Looking for a clean transition, not warped but looking accurate, limited blurring to make the face/hair work. If I cannot tell it has been photoshopped it is a 10/10. Good Luck.

Tuesday, February 25, 2020

More on Composition

Link to more information on composition
Composition

Please make sure all of your work is posted in albums on Flickr.

Thursday, February 20, 2020

New Photography Assignment: Focus on Composition

This is your first official shoot. You are focusing on composing good shots and experimenting with angles.  Each shot is worth 2 marks and should be titled and put into an album called First Shoot.

1. Texture
2. High Angle
3. Low angle
4. Eye shot
5. Ground Level
6. Shadow shot
7. Pattern
8. Focal point
9. Grafitti
10 Fill the Frame
Bonus: Round

Criteria: In focus, well composed shots trying to utilize composition elements. Marks 20

10 Questions

Digital Photo School



Wednesday, February 12, 2020

New Writing Assignment

New Writing Assignment: Setting
  • You are going to write about a favourite place using the 5 senses. As you describe the place, I want to you to use words that create visuals, sounds, tastes, and a sense of touch. The idea here is to write to create an atmosphere or feeling. Make the reader be able to visualize your scene in their mind.
  • You may need to build a fictional story around this place or simply begin describing it. In this assignment students are to focus on the elements of setting ( time, place, description)  using the senses and the concept of show not tell.  (10)

What is SHOW not TELL?

Showdon't tell is a writing technique in which story and characters are related through sensory details and actions rather than exposition. It fosters a style of writing that's more immersive for the reader, allowing them to “be in the room/connect with” with the characters.

Link for further info on this technique.

CRITERIA
  • 1 paragraph or slightly longer, typed, edited, and then good copy handed in
  • show not tell
  • be specific in your writing
  • use the senses when you write
  • make the reader feel they can be right there with you in the setting
Example:
from "The Old House at Home" (1940)
by Joseph Mitchell (1908-1996)
McSorley's bar is short, accommodating approximately ten elbows, and is shored up with iron pipes. It is to the right as you enter. To the left is a row of armchairs with their stiff backs against the wainscoting. The chairs are rickety; when a fat man is sitting in one, it squeaks like new shoes every time he takes a breath. The customers believe in sitting down; if there are vacant chairs, no one ever stands at the bar. Down the middle of the room is a row of battered tables. Their tops are always sticky with spilled ale. 

Another Example: What makes Tolkien’s Mordor so real in his Lord of the Rings cycle is its gloomy, dark detail:
‘The gasping pools were choked with ash and crawling muds, sickly white and grey, as if the mountains had vomitted the filth of their entrails upon the lands about. High mounds of crushed and powdered rock, great cones of earth fire-blasted and poison-stained, stood like an obscene graveyard in endless rows, slowly revealed in the reluctant light.’
In this passage from The Two Towers, Tolkien creates a visceral sense of Mordor as a place. Tolkien shows us Mordor using sound (the ‘gasping’ pools), colour (‘sickly white’, ‘poison-stained’) and motion (‘crawling muds’). The atmosphere of death and decay permeates everything, even in how the rock structures resemble a graveyard.
This showing makes Mordor a visceral place of foreboding and ominous danger. The actions associated with the surrounds are violent and negative, from the mountains ‘vomitting’ their entrails onto the lands to the light’s ‘reluctance’.
This passage wouldn’t be nearly as effective merely told. Tolkien could have written:
‘Frodo was horrified by the landscape – every rock formation reminded him of gravestones and there were foul smells and eerie sights at every turn.’
In this case, we lose the specificity, the detail and the power of Tolkien’s clearly visualized setting. The description is too general and vague. To show settings clearly, like Tolkien:

  • Use the senses – sound, smell, sight. How do the senses combine to give a setting its atmosphere?
  • Use comparison and metaphor: Tolkien personifies the light as reluctant and unwilling. This is an effective example of showing using metaphorical language