photography workshop

Post on 16-Jan-2015

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DESCRIPTION

Digital photography in a New Zealand classroom with the students as the photographers.

TRANSCRIPT

Putting them Behind the Lens

Julie Andersen

Resource by Rachel Boyd

Possible camera guidelines

Double picture

Andy Warhol Art

http://www.befunky.com

Books

Pages from a camp book

Enlargements

MATHS

3D Shapes

Nets

Reading

Retelling a Story

Photo Collage

Posters

PIZAP

Big Huge Labs

Five Frame Story Telling

www.tellusastory.wikispaces.com Link from Paula's Pages

5 frame story telling Guidelines for Telling a Story Guidelines are not rules, but a formula that can be used to suit your creative imagination. Several avenues exist for story telling, such as journalistic reporting, sequential photos that reveal a moment, photographic poetry, and narrative. The following guidelines are for narrative. A good story has characters in action with a beginning, middle, and an ending. Fortunately a lot of information can be given in a single photograph, enhancing the limitations of five photographs for your story. Location, time, and atmosphere aid viewer imagination. Keep standards of pictorial beauty, but pack as many story telling elements in one photograph as possible to develop an action. 1st photo: establish characters and location. 2nd photo: create a situation with possibilities of what might happen. 3rd photo: involve the characters in the situation. 4th photo: build to probable outcomes 5th photo: have a logical, but surprising, end.5th photo: have a logical, but surprising, end.

www.pizap.com

MADE Awards

http://www.madeawards.com/

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