Reflection
Reflection of buildings in a waterdrop on an oregano leaf
I used Huawei P20 Pro to take this image
Aperture - f1.8
Iso - 200
Shutter speed - 3 sec

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Reflection
Reflection of buildings in a waterdrop on an oregano leaf
I used Huawei P20 Pro to take this image
Aperture - f1.8
Iso - 200
Shutter speed - 3 sec
Exploring Light Travel Practical Research - Pinhole Digital Camera (Part 2) The results of my Pinhole Digital Camera experiment. I took about 100 photos in total, all at various different settings, in an attempt to get something that looked vaguely like....well, something! These are the photos that came out the best from the bunch. I first tried to photograph some flowers in my garden, followed by the house across the street, and lastly, my paper recycling bin. I’m not actually sure I was doing it right, but the tutorial videos provided to me along with my own furious google researching on my phone, tells me that I wasn’t actually doing anything wrong, and this is just how it’s supposed to look.
CAMERA OBSCURA 2 TASK. POSTED ON 18TH SEPTEMBER 2020
Task:
create a digital pinhole lens and shot photographs. Challenge accepted 💪
Step by step:
My shots 🙈🤯
And a mess... Who will clean it up 🙈😂😂
Replicating Portraits
31st October 2019
For this mornings studio class I replicated a Portrait of Noel Gallagher from the front cover of the Telegraph Magazine February 2015, the photograph was taken by portrait photographer Nadav Kander.
The subject was positioned away from the background and I turned my camera round so that it was in portrait position and the tripod was pulled back so that the subject would fit the frame from the shoulders upwards.
I only used one light source and attached a Soft Box to it.
My camera settings were 1/125, F8, ISO 100.
The photographs were then taken into the download room and edited using Lightroom I chose one photograph and applied a warm filter to it, the bottom part of the frame was also cropped.
Dream a little dream of me Make me into something sweet Turn the radio on, dancing to a pop song...
In the clouds I saw your face weary yet soft with just a trace of that familiar melancholy.
-tangerine thoughts
Victorian portrait
FINAL RESULT
On our last studio class we were doing Victorian inspired portraits, and as this was just a first try we were just discovering how to, edit these to make them look more like the old ages.
I found this very interesting and creative, as it is something different to try on and this was our first hand on these and it was fun.
So this was my final result of Jessica’s Victorian portrait.
EDIT IMAGE
So, after shooting, choosing and editing the adjustments on Lightroom from my Victorian portraits, I have decided this image would be my final result for this.
In Lightroom , I had double clicked and selected Edit in > Photoshop
Once this opened in Photoshop, I have selected Filter > Noise > Add Noise
Once selected this you can choose what amount of noise do you want to integrate in the image. There is a close- up preview to see how it will look before doing it.
After this I had proceed to add the Vignette effect that a lot of the Victorian photos have.
To do this I had to select the tool of Elliptical Marquee Tool on the right side of the tool’s side. It is the second starting from the top.
Once I made the oval , I have double click > Feather and added 75 Feather Radius pixel.
Then we double click again > Select Invert
We then select Layer > New Adjustment Layer> Curves
After we do this and press ok, a square on the right should appear like seen on the image below.
On that properties panel curve, we can move it around. As we can appreciate, the vignette in here is dark as the curve is down.
The opposite would happen if we turn the curve up.