Photographers today
continue to learn from Cartier-Bresson
and apply his technique to their photographs. Here are a few suggestions for
incorporating Cartier-Bresson's approach into your own photography. Carry a
small camera with you at all times, so that you are always ready to capture a
spontaneous moment. Put yourself in situations where you feel an emotional
connection to the scene. The more connected you are, the more powerful your
pictures will be. Shoot images every day. This may seem obvious, but the more
you shoot, the better you will get at sensing the perfect moment to click the
shutter. Shoot black and white film, or set your digital camera to the black
and white setting. Play around with angles and composition in your photographs.
Cartier-Bresson's images were often off-center, shot from unexpected angles.
Kaston McKee's Photography
Friday, 25 January 2013
Independent Project-Jerry Uelsmann
Jerry
Uelsmann’s most famous technique involves fabricating photographs from
unrelated negatives to create scenes such as hands that appear to be growing
from a tree trunk. Often he focuses on animals, wildlife, nature, and landscape. His mystical and enigmatic images abound with mystery and
symbolism. He believes that it is equally difficult to produce great images no
matter what tools you use. “I see the incredible options that Photoshop
provides, but the bottom line is the technique has to fit with ideas and
images,” he says.
Independent Project- Ansel Adams
Ansel Adams (1902-1984)
was a groundbreaking photographer credited with devising the ‘zone system’
technique (a method of concentrating light on negatives to control the look of
finished pictures) and the ‘theory of visualization’ (the act of measuring a
scene’s light to imagine a finished photo). He is most famously known for his
black and white photo series of the Yosemite Valley in California. He also
authored many instructional books defining and developing his theories.
Ansel used warm and cold feelings with his photo's. More often then not he used cold colours in his photography for modern nature.
Independent Art Projects- Jay Maisel
Jay
Maisel is recognized as one of the top natural-light
color photographers in the world. Shooting commercially since the mid 1950's,
he has always been considered a purist, not doing any image manipulation and
only having dye transfer prints done of his images. Jay maisel's main focus is using patterns, movement, examples of lines, texture, extreme lighting and selective focus
Thursday, 1 November 2012
Assignment 5A
dry brush-circular rainbow
filter-chrome
filter-dark stroke- 5 point white star
filter-photocopy
filter-stylize-horizontal text
circular rainbow, paint, vertical text
colour spot
neon glow-quick select tool
select-colour range-filter-film grain
colour spot
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