Thursday, February 6, 2014

Blog 14: Independent Component 1

LITERAL
 a) I, Symphony Moreno, affirm that I completed my independent component, which represents 30 hours of work.
 b) Sources: Renee Moreno, Jack Bohlka, Portrait Lighting - Names for different portrait lighting set-ups in photography (article) 
 c) Component 1 log is on the right-hand side of the blog
 d) What I have completed is portraits of my sister, each one has a different lighting style or composition. 

INTERPRETATIVE

 The most significant part of this component was the few lighting styles that I learned and a few techniques I learned when adjusting my camera settings ( manual focus, slow shutter speed, wide aperture, ect.,). All of these things are demonstrated in these photos that I took of my sister:



In this photo, I had my sister turn her head slightly towards the light so that we could create the effect of "short lighting" which is where the short side of the face is lit up.


 I had my sister turn her head towards the light a little bit more to create a "key triangle" this is on the right side of her face under her eye. The lighting style where the key triangle is shown is known as Rembrandt.


 In this final photo I had my sister face me fully while the lighting was farther off to my left so that only half of her face is lit. This is called split lighting.
Before taking any of these photos I had to preset my camera to the conditions of the lighting in the room which was very little, so the settings that I had listed above( slow shutter speed, wide aperture, manual focus, high iso) were used through out. Originally I was going to demonstrate five lighting styles but as I was working out of my home I found that I couldn't fully achieve the other two (broad and butterfly) without them coming out very badly.  Here is just some more evidence that I was in ROP working on all of this:



APPLIED

This helped me with the foundations of my project because I realized that photography isn't just snapping photos; you have to really think about what you're doing when pre-setting the camera or setting up the lighting and the room that you're going to shoot in.

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