Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
Cosimo Galluzzi
styofa doing anything
ojovivo
Sade Olutola

Kaledo Art
todays bird

if i look back, i am lost

tannertan36

Kiana Khansmith
taylor price
Peter Solarz
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
Today's Document

★

Origami Around
Stranger Things
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
dirt enthusiast

pixel skylines

seen from United States
seen from Romania
seen from Chile
seen from United States
seen from Bosnia & Herzegovina

seen from Spain

seen from Japan

seen from United States
seen from Brazil
seen from Syria
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Türkiye
seen from Canada

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
@jorgiewendy
Movie Poster Research
I came across this movie poster on the way to college on a billboard and liked the idea. I think the background is simple but effective and something that if done properly could look good. This is one idea that I would like to try.
Adobe Bridge vs Lightroom
Lightroom
Lightroom has everything a photographer will normally need - you can import your images, sort them using several different methods/features, edit whatever is normally editable for a RAW file and at the end you can output these images as JPEG files, as an online gallery or you can print your images.
Lightroom is not Photoshop, so the editing tools available are limited to what you would expect from a RAW converter.
Screen shot of my files in Lightroom, you have to select the ones you want to import before you can edit them.
Lightroom has presets which are useful for beginners
Tools which you can use on Lightroom above, very similar to Adobe Bridge
Adobe Bridge
How my files look in bridge, when you plug in your hard drive all your folders just appear and ready to edit in Camera Raw if you wish to
Examples of how you can 5 star rate your images or reject and delete them above .
Bridge is a file browser intended to be used by anyone working with the Adobe Creative Suite applications. Bridge itself does not have any image editing capabilities, instead when you want to edit a RAW file in Bridge it will open in Camera RAW. Bridge is good for file management and quickly optimising files.
I personally prefer Bridge as i find it easier to organise files, locate files and rate and reject them. You can create a collection then within the collection you can easily rate you image 1 to 5 or reject them. I find this useful when going through all the images that i have shot and rejecting the ones i don’t like. Once i reject the files it makes a collection saying “rejected” i then delete this folder and find this the easiest way to get rid of any unwanted photos and organise my files.
A story told with Adobe Spark
Macro Evaluation
A story told with Adobe Spark
Macro Photography Adobe Spark
A story told with Adobe Spark
People 2 Submission for Iain’s Class on Adobe Spark
A story told with Adobe Spark
Portfolio Planning
A story told with Adobe Spark
Portfolio Evaluation
A story told with Adobe Spark
Portfolio Task for Imaging class
A story told with Adobe Spark
My evaluation for my three Emulate and create tasks.
A story told with Adobe Spark
My Adobe Spark on Henri Cartier Bresson and how i edited my images to look like his work. This is my final part of the Emulate and Create task for Imaging Class.
A story told with Adobe Spark
My Adobe Spark on Clarence White and Pictorialism, part of our emulate and create task for imaging task.
A story told with Adobe Spark
My Adobe Spark of Wet Plate Collodion for Our “Emulate and Create” task for Imaging Class.
Contact sheet of some photos from a baby shoot this i done this morning. Hope to get more experience doing baby photography /portraiture photography as i feel its my weakest point.
Some digital test shots of Craig. When shooting in film in Iain’s class I used my digital camera to do some test shots and make sure i had my film camera at the right settings. I shot in black and white as the film we are using just now is black and white and wanted to see how they may look when developed on film. I enjoyed using the film camera and found it helpful having my digital camera with me to test the lighting.
How does photographic film work?
How does photographic film work?
“ Many materials are sensitive to light. Leave a piece of white office paper in your window for a few weeks and you might well find it turns yellow; plastics that start off white or clear also have a habit of turning yellow or going foggy ("photodegrading") when they've been exposed to light for a while. The dyed colours in cotton clothes and fabrics will also fade in sunlight. And if you're Caucasian, even your skin may change colour after a few hours or days on the beach. But you can't really use paper, plastic, cotton, or skin to capture a picture! “ “ Photographic film is plastic (or sometimes paper) that's coated with an emulsion made from microscopically tiny crystals of silver salts suspended in gelatin.. The silver salts are compounds of silver and halogens such as chlorine, iodine, and bromine, also called silver halides—and their useful feature is the way they begin to change into pure, metallic silver when light falls onto them. If lots of light hits them, they change much more dramatically than if less light hits. This is how the two-dimensional pattern of light rays entering through the lens of a camera from the world outside forms a kind of invisible, chemical trace (called a "latent" image) on the surface of photographic film.”
- Information found here.
“Half made light”
Series of images by Marcus Andersen shot on film.
I choose these images as my research as i love the harsh contrast and light Marcus Andersen captures.
“ Andersen’s photos feature the city of Sydney as an abstracted backdrop for a fragile human presence dwarfed by overwhelming architectural development and consumerism. Amidst the moody, black-and-white images, essayist Sandy Edwards notes that “people scurry about being literally exposed by light. They are struck by shafts of it between buildings like insects coming out for food.” “