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Showing posts from March, 2018

Decay sequence resubmission

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A 'Decay sequence' involves taking photos of a "decaying" object, these photos are all taken from exactly the same place (using a tripod iff possible). All photos are all taken with an equal interval between them in my case this was a two minute interval between each shot I also made sure that the camera settings were identical for each shot i did this by keeping my camera in fully manual settings and focus meaning the camera couldn't try to compensate of lighting by changing the shutter speed or aperture. These images upto thousands sometimes are now stitched together and rendered, i did this in photo shop by converting my raw images to jpeg images so they were smaller images, I then imported the correctly ordered images and put them into video format and saved it. This went well however it could have gone better if I was able to make the video slower in premiere pro, this however was not possible due to how slow the software was. This also could ha...

High speed Photo shoot in the studio.

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The aim of this photo shoot was to capture in the form of a picture a plum landing in a bowl of water creating a splash,the reason we used a high shutter speed (1/250 of a second) was to capture all of the quick movements of the water spraying into the air however we couldn't use any higher of a shutter speed for example 1/1000 of a second because it would have been out of time with the flash. Materials we used: Nikon D750 full frame DSLR Camera flashes  Flashes Infrared sensor (infrared trip wire which triggers the flashes when the IR beam is interrupted) Tripods x3 One plum Clear bowl filled with water about 20cm deep The shoot required 3 people for different jobs: One person was in charge of the camera (settings, focus, framing the picture) One person to drop the plum into the bowl of water and ne person to reset the flashes after they had been triggered This shoot went well because I was able to show and capture the exact moments at which the pl...

Analogue U6 3D

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This is my Analogue 3D model final i created this over the course of three lessons, i used foam board, double sided tape a cutting board and a scalpel to create the stand for the picture, the picture itself i created by sticking multiple different sections of portraits in a pattern to create an almost mirroring effect, i then used the scalpel to score the pictures along the lines creating weak parts in the foam board which i was able to bend to create corners and a more 3 diminutional feel. I created the stand by cutting it out of a piece of foam board and stuck it all together with double sided tape. I used all of the off cuts and trimmed them into triangles and lots of angular shapes, I then stuck these down on the base of the stand for decoration. I created the initial image by cutting two images into lots of triangles and arranged them to fit onto an A6 piece of foam board this created a mirroring effect between the two images. I then used the scalpel to score along...

Lumen pinhole

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Pinhole photography is a method of camera-less photography where light sensitive paper is placed in a light sealed container with a roughly 0.332 mm hole pierced in it however the hole is covered with tape until exposure of the paper is desired. Materials: 35mm card disc (use compass to get correct size on all card circles when cutting them out) 60mm card disc 70mm card disc 70mm felt disc (use the 70mm card disc as a template to cut the felt) (this felt must be black or inpenitrable by light) Scissors to cut circles of card and felt compass and ruler to cut and measure the 3 circles before cutting them out of the card. Acupuncture needle duct tape (black/solid colour that is not opaque or transparent) stapler 500ml can (clean and dry) Can opener sand paper hot glue gun We created our own pinhole cameras by using our can opener to remove the top of the can leaving a cup shape we then pt duct tape around the tip to preventing sharp edges from cutting us. Next we pier...