Monday, November 24, 2014

FASHION

1. On the first video titled Evolution, they changed the size of her eyes, nose, mouth, and even shrunk her pupils. They made her neck longer and her face smaller. They brightened her hair, skin and took away her tan. 
2.  They made her boobs smaller her waist skinnier, her legs longer and her feet smaller. They also took away her tan. 
3. In this video they changed absolutely everything about her. She was an overweight woman with short hair and they turned her into a brunette bombshell. They shrunk her leg size to about a 3, and made her butt and boobs a normal size. they gave her long hair and took away her stomach. 
4. I do not think this is acceptable at all, as long as we keep photoshopping peoples bodies into what we think is acceptable, people won't ever love themselves. 
5. I think it would be even more ethically wrong when he magazines claims to be authentic. 
6. The only changes that are okay is to get rid of acne, but even then, don't go overboard. 
7. Fashion photography is obviously what the eyes want to see, and photojournalism is what is actually happening.
8. When people are able to manipulate a photo that much, it separates the authenticity from the picture. No one will ever believe what they are seeing is the real thing. 
9. I think that these videos were shown to us so that we can realize that everything we see is not always real. Don't trust fashion photography. 
10. These weren't about guys because society doesn't have as high of expectations about guys as they do of girls.

Cold, Purple, Electric

Cold


 Purple
Electric

Thursday, November 20, 2014

Magazines pt. 2

1. Early Magazine Covers
Modeled after the covers of books, they often included a Title, table of contents, and sometimes a small picture. 
2. The Poster Cover
Often the picture was the only thing on the cover besides the title, which even then was most often tiny and in a corner.
3. Pictures Married to Type
When words were starting to be used, but they didn't want to cover any of the picture.
4. In the Forest of Words
They figured out a way to work with the photograph, putting the words all over the cover, but never covering the face, etc. 

My Favorite Cover

This is my favorite portrait from the best magazine covers. I think it stands out so much to me because of how soft the lighting is. I love the simple background and the bright colors of the headpiece. The soft lighting and expression from Elle Fanning make it easy to look at, while at the same time it grabs your attention. It looks almost like Elle is looking right at you. The font that they chose makes it look even more elegant.  I read about how you find out, in the magazine, that the headpiece was made entirely out of icing, and the designer has been doing this since the 90's. 

Best Covers

1. Michael Douglas, formal
2. Germs, environmental
3. Sports illustrated, boston, environmental
4. Floyd Mayweather, formal
5. Flight Risk, formal
6. Oprah's hair cover, informal
7. Brides, formal
8. W, George Clooney, informal
9. Harpers Bazaar, informal
10. New York, Spring Fashion, Elle Fanning, informal
11. The Fader, informal
12. Vanity Fair, Kate Upton, environmental
13. ESPN, Kenneth Faried, formal environmental
14. GQ, Beyonce, informal
15. Wired, Bill Gates, formal
16. Runners World, formal
17. J. Crew, informal

Magazine Tips

1. Keep a familiar recognition from issue to issue.
2. Create curiosity.
3. Keep it intellectually stimulating.
4. Emotionally irresistible.
5. Make it worth the investment of money, and time.

Wednesday, November 12, 2014

American Soldier

1. a) This is the most powerful photo in my opinion because it's not only showing Ian's journey, but the story of those around him. Including this young boy from Iraq who has no idea what he's doing. 

b) When Ian's at home: #1-9
When he's at basic training: #10-49
When he's in Iraq: #50-70
When he's back in Denver: #71-82

The set of photos from when he was in Iraq are the most powerful to me. 

c) These images work together to create a horrible/incredbile story of what thousands of men go through, even though each story is individually different. 

2. a) Ian's story is told from present tense. 

b) These captions enhance the pictures because you wouldn't have as good of an idea of what was going on without them. 

4. a) Captions. 


Ian joins a play-fight with his friends. They do this to relieve the weight of the situation. 

Ian talks on the phone with his girlfriend, they talk about marriage and their future. 

Ian's mom awaits her sons arrival. She's overcome with emotion as he walks out into the gym.

Monday, November 3, 2014

Rules of Photography pt. 2


 Background
Cropping
Create Depth 
 Framing
 Lines
 Avoiding Mergers
Rule of Thirds

Viewpoint












 Symmetry
Balance

Self Portrait and Portraits pt. 1

Tips for self portraits and portraits:
1. Frame your subject
2. Introduce Movement 
3. Play with lighting 

Casual Portraits
I like these because they show a sense of simplicity while still looking interesting, definitely not boring. 
Environmental Portraits
I LOVE these because they have such a huge contrast. The colors are incredibly bright and intriguing as well. 
 Self Portraits
These are probably my favorite, I love simple, raw pictures of people. The emotion behind both of these pictures is unbelievable. 




















My plan for my portrait project is to take pictures of either Parker, or Siobhan, or Maria. They all have really striking facial features. I want to play with the lighting and create contrast on their face. I'm most likely going to take the pictures in my house. I will be using framing, and probably double exposure for these pictures.