Tuesday, 19 June 2012

second year show.

This is one of the pieces from the 2nd year show, Keely Pass was the photographer of these images. I really like how diferent these images are i would of never of thought to do this. An image in a image, all the images inside are old fashioned against how the places look now. The colours in the inner photo are really washed out and dull compaired to the strong, bold images of today. The work was presented on five small pieces of card with a small name plack, i think it looks better with it being just the images instead of having them on a background like quite a few other  photographers did, it makes the images stand out and draws you eye to them instead of a background or other lose objects.

Wednesday, 13 June 2012

Steve Irvine.

Irvine likes to create unreal,dream like images which is why he often uses a ceramic pinhole camera. His images are unedited and incense a vision of reality.

This pinhole photo was taken with a can pinhole camera it was a 30 second exposure. I quite like this image as its different and looks really effective.
This image was taken with a  ceramic camera and was a 20 min exposure i again like this image as its really weird and ghost like, it makes you think of a horror movie.
This image was taken again with a ceramic camera and was a 90 min exposure, i like this image as its different to his others and the image is really clear. This image isn't as dark as his other either.


studio.

We had to go into the studio and use a() camera, and take photos of each other. We all had to be in a photo and take a photo. The image was shown upside down as the camera flipped the image. I took a photo of lucy. We had to develop them in the dark room to get out images.
This is my image of lucy before i inverted it on photoshop.
My inverted image of lucy.

what we did, pinhole photography.

We had to go out and take an image using a pinhole camera. A pinhole camera is a simple camera without a lens and with a single small aperture. We used a light-proof box (a tin spray painted black) with a small hole in one side made with a pin. Light from a scene passes through the hole and projects an inverted image on the opposite side of the box, where the photo paper is. The human eye in bright light acts similarly, as do cameras using small apertures. We had to go out first in a large group and each use i different amount of time exposing the image so we could see how long the exposure needed to be for, and what would give us the best images. Once we'd done this we had to go out again and take our images. The tin we had took 22 seconds to create an image that could be seen and used. We then had to develop our images in the dark room, dry them and download them to blogger.
This is the first image we took with the pinhole camera before we uploaded it to photoshop and inverted it. (image adjustments, invert). This exposure was for 1min15.
Our inverted image.

The images we took with the pinhole camera after we new how long the exposure had to be for. Before they were inverted. These exposures were for 22seconds.

The images after we inverted them on photoshop.