Wednesday, December 10, 2014

Final Exam Review

1. Captions
Bobo the monkey cowers as his frightening trainer approaches,  Bobo had been in custody since he was little. 

An owl yawns in the fresh powdery snow, waking from a warm sleep during an overnight storm.

2. Rules Of Photography 

1. Rule of thirds - Two thirds of the photo should have negative space, and the object should be facing it.
2. Balancing Elements - the objects of the photo should be symmetrical on the photo.
3. Leading Lines - lines should lead from the edge of the photo to the object.
4. Symmetry and Patterns (repetition) - there should be a sense of repetition in the photo.
5. Viewpoint - If taken from far away, the photo should look down at an angle on the object of the photo.
6. Background - There should be nothing insane in the background.
7. Create depth - The object should be in the foreground of the photo.
8. Framing - surrounding objects should pram the subject of the photo.
9. Cropping - Unnecessary objects should be cropped out of the photo.
10. Mergers and avoiding them - There should be nothing in the background that interacts with the main object of the photo.

3. Aperture, Shutter Speed, ISO

Aperture - the opening of the lens that allows in light, much like the pupil of an eye.
Shutter Speed - how fast a photo is taken with how long the shutter of the camera is open.
ISO - Sensitivity to light of a camera.

4. On photoshop, it is unethical to manipulate the body of a model to make them more attractive to the human eye.

5. Portraits
Environmental - The model is interacting with the environment around them.
Self - The portrait is taken by the model themselves.
Casual - the model isn't necessarily looking directly into the camera or having their photo taken.

6. Exposure, Depth Of Field, Focal Length
Exposure - the amount of light let into a photo
Depth Of Field - How much of the photo is in focus
Focal Length - how close you are to the subject of the photo

7. Magazine Cover Types
Early - Looked much more like books, existed from 1700's to the end of the 19th century.
Poster - 1890-1960, large pictures with no words
Married To - The cover headline interacts with the main photo/model.
Forest of words - Mainly starting in the 21st century, the photo began to be covered in words.

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