Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Cropping





I wanted to see how some of the landscape assignment photos looked cropped and with type as if they were books or a pamphlet.

Sunday, September 27, 2009

Landscape Assignment




This week we are to turn in about 50 images of landscapes. Tony wants us to vary the exposure compensation on a few. Here is the link to the images I'm turning in.

Friday, September 25, 2009

Converting Color Images to Black and White




This is a class exersise I did in the photo editing class I took this summer. We used Adobe Lightroom 2 for this tutorial. The middle image was made by converting to greyscale. The bottom image has the saturation and vibrance increased. The blue was decreased to darken the sky. The yellow and green were decreased to darken the ground. A brush and mask were used to brighten the road and areas of the mountain.

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Woodland Restoration




For the past 6 years I have been restoring the woodland of our subdivision's common ground. Eight years ago I cleared the honeysuckle from the portion of my backyard that borders the common ground and made a shade garden of ferns, hostas, ornamentals and a few native shrubs. The common ground portion has been planted with native plants. Over 3,500 yard waste bags of honeysuckle were hauled out over the past 8 years. After the bush honeysuckle was removed, winter creeper and Japanese honeysuckle started to become problems. These have been very aggressively removed over the past 2 1/2 years.

Rob Emmett, the forester for the Department of Conservation, for the St. Louis area made a field visit in December 2007. He gave me helpful information on future maintenance and encouraged me to enter the project for the Missouri Arbor Award of Excellence. In January 2009 I was notified that the project won a Citation of Merit. In March I went to Columbia, Missouri to a conference sponsored by the Urban Forestry Council and the Department of Conservation, to receive the award.

Monday, September 21, 2009

Flash Assignment




The assignment this week is to use 3 different types of flash techniques. I mostly worked with fill flash but did a few slow sync and freeze action. Trying to put enough flash on my black poodle KT to see her face was difficult in bright sun or twilight. Here is a link to see the the photos I turned in.

Friday, September 18, 2009

A Well Socialized Dog

This video will show how years of obedience classes, practice and socializing a dog can get great results.


Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Photoshop Transform options


Each fish was copied from the same fish and is on a separate layer. The transform options of scale, distort, skew, rotate, perspective, and flip horizontal were used to get the effect of different fish. The hue, saturation or brightness was changed on each fish. The original fish had a light reflection near the tail and several identifying markings around the eye that were changed. A good selection is critical.

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Photo story


The assignment that is due in two days is to shoot a photo story. Tony Doesn't want us to simply shoot an event. He wants us to go inside the event and tell with pictures how the person does the process. My neighbor,Seth, likes to ride his bicycle on Sunday mornings. He was very patient and let me take pictures of his morning routine getting ready to go cycling.
Here is the link to see the photos I took for this assignment.

Saturday, September 12, 2009

POSTERS



I really like making posters. These two were made for previous classes I took at St. Louis Community College, which I'll just call in future posts Meramec. That's the name of the campus, named after the Meramec river which is nearby. The Cuban poster was made in Adobe Illustrator The assignment was to make a protest poster. I got the idea when I heared the news that Fidel Castro was turning power over to his brother. The concert poster was done in Photoshop. Trio Globo was here last spring and our class made posters for the event. One of the posters was used in the school newspaper but it wasn't mine. It was the first time I used Helvetica. Now I use it ad nauseam. Sizing and moving the graphic layers around the page is my favorite part of the project.

Friday, September 11, 2009

Replacing the sky with Photoshop



The photo was taken on the Aqua Caliente Indian Reservation in Palm Springs. It's a California fan palm oasis. The palms need a permanent water supply such as seeps, springs and streams.
Some oasis are along fault lines where water is pushed to the surface. I've been to several oases in Arizona and California. There are also a few in southern Nevada.

After selecting the sky I filled it with the color of the sky from a different image I took the same day. I used a mask and the gradient tool to get the lighter color by the mountain. I got some banding which I corrected by adding a small amount of Gaussian blur and then some noise.

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Learning how to shoot a photo story




The last hour of today's class was spent outdoors as Tony explained how to shoot a photo story. It was a beautiful morning. Unfortunately nice mornings in early September remind me of 9/11. I've posted some pictures of the class and Tony. Some of us took turns being the subject or director. Holly, who worked for a photographer after high school, was getting all these amazing shots from different angles. Johnny as a director was creating all kinds of scenes. There's a lot of young talent in this class.

I cropped these photos, using the front photo option in Photoshop. All 3 photos are the same size and resolution. They align nicely when uploaded. Without using this option, it's harder to do this.

I didn't take enough pictures to have a good section from which to choose. The assignment for this weekend is to take pictures that tell a story. We need to get at least 50 pictures put on our photo site. The challange will be to figure out what's going to be the story. I find it's much easier to be told what to shoot.

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Palm Trees



I've been fascinated with palm trees for years. There are two species of palms, in this picture, taken in Palm Springs, California. The taller ones with narrow trunks are Mexican fan palms. The shorter ones with the thick trunks are California fan palms. The Mexican fans have a lighter colored trunk and usually are flared at the base to give it more stability. My niece Rayna, who also likes to identify palms, calls it a trumpet bottom. The California fans have a dark trunk, and usually have a bigger petticoat or shag hanging below the leaves. In cities in Arizona and California it's common to see them planted near each other, and it's usually easy to tell the difference. Along the gulf coast and lower atlantic states the Mexican fan is way more frequently planted than the California fan palm.

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Teaching your dog the finish

Some of you couldn't open the mp4 video file I emailed. I couldn't get a quickTime movie small enough to email. I'm posting the file so you can view it.

portrait assignment




Getting people to relax when I did this assignment was difficult. I found that if I told them that we wanted to get a nice casual picture that they could use for work, we got better results. Two of the people publish articles and newsletters and they were excited about getting a good portrait.

Friday, September 4, 2009

Photo Essays







I enjoy making photo essays. This summer I took a photo editing class with a great instructor, Michael Swoboda. We covered topics like typography, history of photography, architecture, art history, design, color theory, and an endless list of other subjects. I started putting together these photo essays on 11" x 14" paper, and would bring them in the morning to the group I have coffee with at Einstein's each morning. Nobody would read the text if it was more than a few lines. The challenge was to edit the information.

Here are two of my favorite subjects, the International Typographic Style and the font Helvetica. I spent the 5th grade in Munich Germany in 1955 when my father was in the Army. I noticed this style that I didn't remember seeing in the States. Last year I got into a Helvetica frenzy, and used it for almost every poster I made. I couldn't get enough Helvetica. There even is a feature length film made for its 50th anniversary in 2007. I don't think any other font has a movie.

Here's a link to see more of my photo essays.



Thursday, September 3, 2009

Dog Practice



I used the rectangular marquis tool in photoshop to make this graphic. Each selection is on a different layer. After I pasted the selection on its layer, I deleted it from the source layer. This prevented me from overlapping selections. Another way is to make all the rectangles on one layer and use it as a clipping mask. I like the first way best,because then I could move the layers around and elongate the nose.

This morning we practiced the individual exercises for the obedience trial next month. I made a video of the retrieve over the high jump. I put the camera on a small tripod and put it on the hood of the car. On one retrieve she was slow to return but had a good finish. We did it again and she returned great but had a sloppy finish. I spliced the two clips together and there is a rough transition because we are in different locations. I'm going to have to start using Final Cut instead of iMovie. I love iMovie because it's so easy.

I haven't started the portrait project for class yet. Maybe this afternoon.

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Dog Training



We're busy getting ready for two obedience trials in October. KT got her AKC Companion Dog title in June. Now we're working on Companion Dog Excellent. Last month we had difficulty with the retrieve over the high jump. She would nicely jump on the way out but would either just look at the dumbbell or if she picked it up, she wouldn't jump on the way back. We practice before dinner when she is hungry and I give her a piece of chicken each time she brings back the dumbbell. She's now so eager to do the retrieve, a few times she started the retrieve without waiting for the command.

She also started cutting to the right on the broad jump. I put a large traffic cone past the jump to make her go down the center. We are now down to a little plastic bottle. Each week I use a smaller object.

There is a portrait project due next week in the photography class. It will be a challenge to see if I can make a modern style photo portrait. I usually end up with some Edwardian looking picture with a dazed pensive stare.

The picture of KT is after she ran though some weeds. It takes a long time to get out the seeds and burs out of poodle hair. The pollen comes out only with a bath.

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

white balance

ISO 80 1/6 f 2.6 tungsten setting

auto white balance


ISO 800 1/60 f2.6 tungsten setting

The assignment was to take a a series of images using the different white balance settings in the camera. That was easy; posting the pictures and linking them to the blog site seemed hard at first but now is easy. I wasn't the only one who had difficulty. Tony spent an hour linking each blog site to the class site and helping the class link their blogs to their photo sites.

We took pictures in class today under low light with different ISO settings and no flash. I forgot to change the color balance back to auto, after the last assignment. It was on the tungsten setting. The lighting in the room is mostly florescent with some recessed tungsten bulbs. THe tungsten setting wasn't bad. Here is a comparison.