Monday, April 23, 2012

Learning Never Ends............................................


            Digital photography has been a creative outlet for me. I never realized that so much artistic thought can encompass a world so technology driven.  Photography is no longer the untimely task of chemically exposing film, but rather an innovative computer based technology that uses sensors and lenses to capture the unexpected beauty of the world. The Digital Age is upon us and so is the increasing use of digital photography.
There are three different kinds of digital cameras: digital SLR cameras, compact digicams, and cellular camera phones. This semester I used a cellular camera phone and a digital SLR camera this semester. I got to know my cameras very well. My cellular camera phone was convenient when I did not have my digital camera; however, both had similar features and capabilities that provided high quality photos. This proves to me that camera phones feature more creative controls and functions that produce better images as technology advances.  
As Dr. Hart always says, “You don't take a photograph.  You make a photograph." No matter if it is film or digital, this concept still applies. Digital photography has made the arduous and chemically- driven task of making a photograph not only simpler but easy enough for even the most amateur to master. However, there are countless terms such as LCD, EXIF, parallax, composition, previsualizing, JPEG, TIFF, raw, pixel, aperture, shutter speed, ISO, f-stop, white balance, and macro mode that a photographer must now remember. There is so much more to taking and publishing a photograph than the olds days. There is so much more to know and learn.
In order to make a photograph, I’ve learned that you have to use the helpful guidelines of the rules of composition.  One rule that I’ve learned to live by if all else fails is the rule of thirds. This gives me a grid to work with and compose more compelling photos that have more tension, energy, and interest. Simply placing the subject in the middle just doesn’t cut it anymore. The photograph below illustrates this point. I took the shot during a panel discussion during MCJR week. I positioned my camera so that the panelist was in the first third of the grid from the right in my viewfinder. He is now the subject of interest, which entices the viewer to wonder who he is talking to.

 Another rule that I like to use is framing. Framing draws attention to a focal point, which can give the photograph layer, depth, content and layers. A frame does not have to have four sides or be an actual frame, but rather objects or shapes that block a side. Below is a basketball I saw under a small end table. The end table legs and patterned carpet provided a nice frame that opposed the rather round ball. This drew more attention to the ball.

 One key thing that I learned is the magic of photo editing. With the advancement of technology, there has even been expansion in altering photos via different effects and enhancements. Nowadays, an original picture can be easily altered into a totally different image once it hits a computer. Below are two photos that I altered and combined in order to create a ghost image and a UFO. Exciting stuff!



As you can see, photography is continually progressing towards a technology-based industry. People are seldomly using the older form due to the lack of convenience, ease, and adjustability. The Digital Age has now provided photographers with ways to capture images effortlessly but with more technicalities. But as I have said, photography is a never-ending learning process. Pointing and shooting is easy to do but actual composition is studied and learned.



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