Monday, February 27, 2017

In class Tue Feb 28th

Critique Project 2
- Hand your 8 .jpg images into Joe labeled with your name and a number in a folder labeled with your name on your USB thumb drive.


Film & Animation



Eye Level
An eye-level shot is the most basic type of shot and involves simply picking up a camera or video recorder and taking a straight-on, eye-level photograph. This technique is the most common shot used by photographers, seen in many casual pictures, such as family photos or vacation shots.

High Angle
A high-angle shot involves taking a photograph from someplace above a subject at a diagonal angle. This type of angle may make a subject look smaller or even childlike.

Low Angle (Worms Eye)
A low-angle shot is the opposite of the high-angle shot. In a low-angle shot, the photographer is below the subject and takes a photograph looking up at the subject. This angle is often used to make a subject appear larger, taller or more powerful.

Bird's Eye
This type of shot is similar to the high-angle shot in that the photographer is situated above the subject. However, unlike a high-angle shot, a bird's eye shot looks straight on at a subject rather than using an angle. This type of shot is used to achieve very dramatic images.

Slanted
A slanted shot, or dutch tilt, is where the camera is tilted to the side to give the horizon a unique, angled appearance. This is a popular shot for movie stills and in magazines as it portrays a hip, edgy feeling in the photograph
Camera Movement



Camera Point of View (POV)

Close-Ups
A close-up (abbreviated "CU") is when the camera focuses on just one character's face or other part of him, taking up the entire frame. These shots are used often when a character is talking, because it puts the viewer in an almost face-to-face context. When the camera zooms directly into part of a person's face or body, so that the frame shows nothing but his body, this is an extreme close-up, or ECU. Going in the opposite direction, a medium close-up (MCU) is halfway between a standard CU and a mid-shot--which shows part of the scene and the subject.

Wide Shots
Wide Shots Abbreviated (WS) give a great view of the entire area your subject is standing in, and you can see the person's entire body against the backdrop of his setting. As the camera zooms out, making the person almost unrecognizable but giving a good view of the entire area, it becomes a VWS, or very wide shot. Finally, an extreme wide shot (EWS) takes the camera out so that you can't even see the subject, but gives the viewer a clear picture of where the viewer is supposed to be--these are generally used as establishing shots. VWS are generally taken from cranes, so they're sometimes called crane shots, and EWS can be taken from helicopters and called aerial shots.

Multiple People Shots.
Conversations between two people require a special camera angle to capture the intimacy of the conversations. A two shot (TS) is the most common way to show conversation: place both subjects in the same mid-shot. The next most familiar style is the over-the-shoulder shot, or OSS, which looks at the talking subject from the listener's perspective, quite literally over his shoulder. Some camera operators also set up the noddy shot, which is most common in interviews, and is taken from the perspective of the interviewee.


POV
The first-person perspective is a useful way to put the audience almost directly in the character's shoes. The POV shot is pretty much what the character would see--as if she is actually holding the camera herself. POV, meaning point-of-view, shots are often used to heighten the intensity of a scenario.


Weather Shots
If the subject is the weather itself, it is referred to as a weather shot. These images give the viewer a moment's reprieve from the action or drama of the film as well as establishing what's going on in the world around them. If the weather is wet and rainy, that will affect the mood of the film overall; a bright, shiny day on the other hand lightens the mood.



Camera Movement
A director may choose to move action along by telling the story as a series of cuts, going from one shot to another, or they may decide to move the camera with the action. Moving the camera often takes a great deal of time, and makes the action seem slower, as it takes several second for a moving camera shot to be effective, when the same information may be placed on screen in a series of fast cuts. Not only must the style of movement be chosen, but the method of actually moving the camera must be selected too. There are seven basic methods:

Pans
A movement which scans a scene horizontally. The camera is placed on a tripod, which operates as a stationary axis point as the camera is turned, often to follow a moving object which is kept in the middle of the frame.

Tilts
A movement which scans a scene vertically, otherwise similar to a pan.

Dolly Shots
Sometimes called TRUCKING or TRACKING shots. The camera is placed on a moving vehicle and moves alongside the action, generally following a moving figure or object. Complicated dolly shots will involve a track being laid on set for the camera to follow, hence the name. The camera might be mounted on a car, a plane, or even a shopping trolley. A dolly shot may be a good way of portraying movement, the journey of a character for instance, or for moving from a long shot to a close-up, gradually focusing the audience on a particular object or character.

4. Hand-held shots
The hand-held movie camera first saw widespread use during World War II, when news reporters took their windup Arriflexes and Eyemos into the heat of battle, producing some of the most arresting footage of the twentieth century. After the war, it took a while for commercially produced movies to catch up, and documentary makers led the way, demanding the production of smaller, lighter cameras that could be moved in and out of a scene with speed, producing a "fly-on-the-wall" effect.This aesthetic took a while to catch on with mainstream Hollywood, as it gives a jerky, ragged effect, totally at odds with the organized smoothness of a dolly shot. The Steadicam (a heavy contraption which is attached a camera to an operator by a harness. The camera is stabilized so it moves independently) was debuted in Marathon Man (1976), bringing a new smoothness to hand held camera movement and has been used to great effect in movies and TV shows ever since. No "walk and talk" sequence would be complete without one. Hand held cameras denote a certain kind of gritty realism, and they can make the audience feel as though they are part of a scene, rather than viewing it from a detached, frozen position.




Examples



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Pes!




Assignment 2
Bring in 10 ideas for your animation for the  beginning of class on thursday!


Tuesday, February 21, 2017

In class Thur Feb 23rd

All about time!

Stop Motion Animation
- individual photographs taken and displayed sequentially and continuously in one space.



Ways to shoot a stopmotion animation
* Camera moves through space
* People move in front of camera
* You move objects in front of the camera
* Any of the above three together




Film & Animation




Digital Video Resolution



















Which way does the camera go?





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Work on Project 2



Project 2 due at the end of class Today! (hand it in on your USB thumb drive in a folder labeled with your name!)

Monday, February 20, 2017

In class Tue Feb 21st


Virtual Space:

The Internet, first wave

They Rule

Jackson Pollack

the Sistine Chapel

In B flat

Lost in Translation




The Social Web, Second Wave


What is the social web?

The social web has become the Semantic web (3rd generation).



Popular Web Applications

- Smug Mug, Flickr, Picasa, Photobucket

- Blogger, Tumblr, TypePad, WordPress

- Youtube, Sidereel, Vimeo

- Soundcloud, Indaba

- Fire Alpaca, Sumo Paint

- Facebook, Myspace

- dropbox



iPhone/iPad Applications

- Spectrum - Color Palette Picker

- Pure, ProCam XL, Classic Toy, Pixlromantic, Instagram - Camera Apps

- Tumblr, Twitter - Social Blog Apps

- Vine, Hyperlapse - Social Video Apps

- Stop Motion - Stopmotion animation App

- FiLMiC Pro, Action Motion - Video Camera Apps

- PixlrExpress+, Aviary - Photo/Image manipulation Apps

- Pic Collage - Image layout

- Adobe Ideas, Paper, Inkpad - Digital drawing, painting, illustration Apps

- Makerbot PrintShop, 123D Sculpt, 123D Design - 3d modeling Apps

- 123D Catch, Capture - 3d image capture Apps

- Voice Dictation - Hate writing papers?


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Project 1 (semester long project) Assigned

Hook up Blogger and make your first post!






Using Blogger
- setting up your blog
- makin a post







Completing Project 2

1) create a new 2.5" x 3.5" document at 180 dpi (resolution) --> File New

2) use "save as" to save the document 8 times as "temp-1.psd", "temp-2.psd", "temp-3.psd".....ect

3) find images on the internet and save them to your desktop. *Make sure to use the advanced search function to search for "Large" Images only

4) open your images in Photoshop and "Copy" and "Paste" them into your Template file.

5) move and alter your layers
----- Try "erasing", changing the "mode" of a layer, "selecting" and "deleting", using "adjustments" and "filters"

6) when finished save the file as a .PSD 





Photoshop Day 3
- Mode
* we will always be using ‘RGB’
note (some images on the web are GIFs, these need to be converted to RGB before you can use them)



Clone Stamp
- a 2 step tool, sample and place

Text Tool
- works like Microsoft Word

Other Vector Tools
- shape tools


- Adjustments


Project 2 Due by the end of class Feb 23rd

Wednesday, February 15, 2017

In class thur Feb 16th


Aspects of Virtuality?



* what are the qualities of virtual space?

* where do we see virtual space overlap society?





Virtual Continuum

The Virtuality Continuum is a phrase used to describe a concept that there is a continuous scale ranging between the completely virtual, a Virtual Reality, and the completely real: Reality. The reality-virtuality continuum therefore encompasses all possible variations and compositions of real and virtual objects. The concept was first introduced by Paul Milgram.



Reality and <--------------->Virtual Reality


The area between the two extremes, where both the real and the virtual are mixed, is the so-called Mixed reality. This in turn is said to consist of both Augmented Reality, where the virtual augments the real, and Augmented virtuality, where the real augments the virtual.





Reality    Augmented Virtuality    Augmented Reality   Virtual Reality

Human   Cyborg       Android         Robot







Mann's Continuum includes the level of degrees of mediation.




















M = level of mediation

R = reality

V = virtual reality






Augmented Reality ex.

Microsoft Hololens












Augmented Virtual Reality ex


Oculus Rift


Google Cardboard





Mediated Reality ex












Creating & Manipulating Images in Photoshop

- Checkin' out the program
--- Tool Bar
- Move Tool

- Selection Tools
- Drawing Tools


Menu
File -- New / Open / Save / Save As
Image --> Image Size / Canvas Size / Canvas Rotation



DPI - Dots Per Inch

- 72 dpi screen resolution *
- 180 dpi lowest possible printing resolution
- 240-360 dpi good printing resolution
- 600-1200 dpi super high resolution


* Retina style displays have much higher resolutions then 72 dpi



- Image Size
- Canvas Size

- Image Rotation

- Hand Tool
- Zoom Tool

- Clone Stamp
- Text Tool
- Other Vector Tools

- Adjustments
* Levels is the best way to adjust an images contrast and value
— the Histogram


Layers
- new layers
- layer visibility
- blend modes
- opacity
- changing layer position
- layer effects







ATC walk through

1) create a new 2.5" x 3.5" document at 180 dpi (resolution) --> File New

2) use "save as" to save the document 8 times as "temp-1.psd", "temp-2.psd", "temp-3.psd".....ect

3) find images on the internet and save them to your desktop. *Make sure to use the advanced search function to search for "Large" Images only

4) open your images in Photoshop and "Copy" and "Paste" them into your Template file.

5) move and alter your layers
----- Try "erasing", changing the "mode" of a layer, "selecting" and "deleting", using "adjustments" and "filters"

6) when finished save the file as a .PSD 





This week we start the blog/image a day assignment!



Project 2 Assigned - Artist Trading Cards ATC's


Project 2 Due by the end of class Sept 23rd

Thursday, February 9, 2017

Class Cancelled

Class Cancelled Today!

To get ahead, look up introduction to Photoshop CC videos on youtube and watch a few. 

Download the Gimp or a free trial version of Adobe Photoshop CC to try it out. 

Wednesday, February 8, 2017

In class Thur Feb 9th

Interacting with the virtual world.
Anything can become an extension of yourself. You just need to practice for 4 weeks!



Writers:
Donna Haraway - The Cyborg Manifesto


Artist:

Banksey - Street Art - Interaction with public space.
Stelarc - Conceptual Art - The body is useless we are the mind.
Camille Utterback - Interactive Projection Art


Daniel Rozen - Reactive Art
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Creating & Manipulating Images in Photoshop Day 2


- Layers 
— visibility
— moving a layer
— locking a layer

- Hand Tool
- Zoom Tool

- Clone Stamp
- Text Tool
- Other Vector Tools

- Image Size
- Canvas Size
- Image Rotation

- Mode
* we will always be using ‘RGB’
note (some images on the web are GIFs, these need to be converted to RGB before you can use them)

- Adjustments
* Levels is the best way to adjust an images contrast and value
— the Histogram




Project 2 - Artist Trading Cards











Monday, February 6, 2017

In class tue Feb 7th

Welcome to ART 116 Digital is Fundamental: 4D & 5D design.




What is this class about?
It is an overview on creating art considering the 4th & 5th dimensions.


Is this a 'computer class'?
No. Although we will definitely be using your laptops for class, this course focuses on how ALL art mediums interact with these two different dimensions.
* this area of art crosses over many areas so therefore has many names. some of the more popular names are: Digital Art, Inter-Media, Hybred Media, Multi-Media & Digital Media.

Can you name an art medium that has not intersected with the computer?



How does this class work?
Information for this class will come through this blog and Google Calander. You are expected to visit both frequently. I generally update the blog within 12 hours of class, the calendar gets updated as is needed. 

The blog contains all the information related to the class including links to examples, a post on what will be covered each class, the syllabus, project details and links to useful websites.


Lets take a look at this sites.


Why do I use these websites for class?


Lets talk about communication

What forms of communication do you use? Lets make a list.

Do you use different forms of communication for different types of information?

Do your parents have a different idea about what forms of communication to use and when compared to you?

Now make a list of the websites/Apps you frequent most.
 - what do each of these websites/Apps do for you? What communication problem are they solving?



Would you play Social Roulette?



Fun example stopmotin animation

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winter break

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