Monday, May 4, 2009

Beyond Photography

If you know that a common-household fuse is different than a swordfish then you can understand the difference between nuclear fusion and nuclear fission, as I hope these 2 sort-animations will illustrate.

Friday, May 1, 2009

Portrait Photography 2


By far the most engaging challenge of the semester has been Portrait Photography, so I wanted to try it again. I appreciate Tony telling us we don't have to spend a fortune to get started; that we can use the $20 photo studio, but I really wish I could have gotten access to the photo studio on the second floor of the Humanities East building with it's more sophisticated strobe lights, reflectors and luxurious space, without it I was forced to use one of the music school's piano rehearsal rooms and a set of lights from Home Depot (kindly donated by Don Grant). Unfortunately my camera choked, and the majority of the images came out blurred and streaked, still I'd like to thank the model for driving all the way from Arnold Missouri to help me out, I couldn't have done it without her. Thanks Kat!!!

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Time Lapse Photography


I love animation and time lapse photography! So this is without a doubt my favorite assignment of the semester. The 535 images that make up this short-animated movie were imported into AfterEffects as a jpeg sequence and exported to QuickTime.

Monday, April 6, 2009

Color Photography


On some of these photos I used the technic (I learned from Mike Swoboda) where you blur the image and then Fade to the Overlay, Softlight or Hardlight blending mode in order to achieve a soft-focus effect with more vibrant colors . On others I took advantage of my tripod, used Exposure Variation and combined the various images using Photomatix Pro.

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Black & White Photography


I captured these images of the Gulliver sculpture on the Meramec campus at night using exposure compensation and then sewed them together with Photomatix Pro. I shot in both raw and jpg formats but couldn't see any distinguishable difference in the final images.

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

(Not So) Macro Photography

After reviewing the other student's work for this assignment I wondered why everyone else had stunning macro images of objects like coins and flowers, but the best I was able to capture was some half way decent close-up shots, but nothing of very sharp focus like you would see with true macro photography.

Thankfully Tony stayed after class, looked over my camera and the owner's manual and explained that the lens for this camera doesn't have a true macro function; it can't focus on objects closer that 14 inches from the base point.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Portrait Photography 1

I shot quite a few portraits of other people, in studio, with a key, a fill and a rim light, but afterwards I longed to shoot a portrait that nobody else could. The subject is one of my very closest friends since the 7th grade, and the environment is his one-of-a-kind apartment filled with statues, figurines, posters, albums, CDs, magazines, books, comic books and sketchbooks.