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Artist Reflection

1.) The best picture of this assignment is the boat because it has a good sense of lighting to it. 2.) The weakest shot is the picture of the chair and table because i feel like i couldve positioned the camera better. 3.) The weakest shot can be improved by better positioning of camera. 4.) I used photoshop for lightness and darkness. 5.) I was able to meet the objective of the assignment by taking pictures that properly display the assignment requirements. 6.) The easy thing about this assignment was finding things to take pictures of because an object is everywhere. 7.) The hardest part of this assignment was finding the time to take pictures. I worked a lot more hours than i normally do last week. 8.) I would take more pictures if i could redo this assignment. 9.) I give myself a 6 for effort because i barely took pictures and duplicate pictures, but when i did the pictures turned out really nice.

Composition: Points to Ponder

Leading lines:there are multiple lines that makes you focus on different places. Brightness: this picture was adjusted to fit the perfect light and darkness for the mood. Emphasize foreground: The horizon is above the center. Emphasizes height and distance: the horizon is the floor on the bottom, and it emphasizes the distance from the chair to the ground.  Rule of Thirds: the chair is centered to the right of the picture, being the main focus. Leading Lines: the walkway to the dock makes movement in the picture.  Avoids Bulls-eye: i'm centered in the middle of the picture on eye level. Simplicity: this picture fills the frame. Multiple people: this picture was at a concert showing multiple subjects in the frame.

Falling Man

I think this photo is a part of Time's Magazine's 100 Best Collection because of how powerful it is. It was shot on 9/11, and the man chose to jump out the window. But he wasn't just falling, he was also in a stance upside down and praying. The picture gives a big sick stomach feeling to just about everyone who sees it, and it shows really how that day was: terrible and frightening.

Essential Question

The difference between a snapshot and artistic photography is that a snapshot really doesn't require as much time and effort as artistic photography does. Artistic photography involves setting up your camera the right way and editing it a lot to focus on something.

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