jessicalosorata.blogspot.com
None of Your Business: Movie Reviews
http://jessicalosorata.blogspot.com/2009/02/movie-reviews.html
None of Your Business. A place for photographic growth. Thursday, February 26, 2009. Review #1 - O Brother Where Art Thou? Review #2 - Pecker. I love you more than Kodak! I love you more than kodak. Was for sure the best sentence at the whole movie. But what would you say instead of that? I mean nobody shoots film anymore. so what would we say instead of, I love you more than kodak? Nobody shoots film anymore. I meant nobody of the normal people shoots film anymore). February 26, 2009 at 6:54 PM. Good re...
analognotes.blogspot.com
AT Notes: December 2008
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Tuesday, December 9, 2008. If the subject is in the shadows we will meter for the shadows (most of the time). If most of the scene other than the subject is highlights we will split the difference between highlight and shadow meter readings. If the subject is in the highlights and most of the scene consists of highlights, meter for the highlights. If half of the scene is shadow and half is highlights, shoot at the calculated middle meter reading. EX f8 @ 1/60 - f8 @ 1/125. Less time (exposure for print).
analognotes.blogspot.com
AT Notes: February 2009
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Sunday, February 8, 2009. Panchromatic film is sensitive to all spectrum of light so it must be handled and processed in complete darkness. We use a light tight tank during processing to make it more convenient. Total Dark Loading Space. We must be in total darkness to load film. To check for light leaks, allow your eyes 5-10 minutes to adjust to the darkness then look for leaks. Use a thermometer designed for photographic use. Control of temperature is CRITICAL. Step by Step Loading Film. Developer temp...
analognotes.blogspot.com
AT Notes: January 2009
http://analognotes.blogspot.com/2009_01_01_archive.html
Sunday, January 18, 2009. Light tight enclosure protecting the film from unwanted exposure to light. Opens to allow loading of film. Forms and image of the subject matter on the film. Moves the lens in and out to select the subject distance that will be in focus. Shows the approximate view of the part of the subject that will be in the image on the film and may include a method for checking the focus of the image. A lever or knob that moves the film forward for the next photograph. Since the viewfinder i...
analognotes.blogspot.com
AT Notes: Flashing and Split Filtration Printing
http://analognotes.blogspot.com/2009/01/flashing-and-split-filtration-printing.html
Sunday, January 18, 2009. Flashing and Split Filtration Printing. For subjects that have slight substance in their high values, that is, various close tonalities that are difficult to hold in the print. EX. Clouds, white water. A threshold exposure added to an overall print to reduce contrast extremes. Place a piece of diffusion material (soft focus material) under the lens. Place the lowest contrast filter (highest number yellow). With the negative removed, stop the lens down to f/16. Yellow filtration ...
analognotes.blogspot.com
AT Notes: Chapter 5
http://analognotes.blogspot.com/2009/02/chapter-5.html
Sunday, February 8, 2009. Panchromatic film is sensitive to all spectrum of light so it must be handled and processed in complete darkness. We use a light tight tank during processing to make it more convenient. Total Dark Loading Space. We must be in total darkness to load film. To check for light leaks, allow your eyes 5-10 minutes to adjust to the darkness then look for leaks. Use a thermometer designed for photographic use. Control of temperature is CRITICAL. Step by Step Loading Film. Developer temp...
jessicalosorata.blogspot.com
None of Your Business: February 2009
http://jessicalosorata.blogspot.com/2009_02_01_archive.html
None of Your Business. A place for photographic growth. Thursday, February 26, 2009. Review #1 - O Brother Where Art Thou? Review #2 - Pecker. I love you more than Kodak! Subscribe to: Posts (Atom).
jessicalosorata.blogspot.com
None of Your Business: October 2008
http://jessicalosorata.blogspot.com/2008_10_01_archive.html
None of Your Business. A place for photographic growth. Thursday, October 2, 2008. Speak of the Devil! Wednesday, October 1, 2008. I really want to get into photojournalism. The natural feel, emotion and overall interpretation generate such "bare" photographs. Photojournalism seems to be the most true to it's nature, and it is what it is. You can interpret it anyway you like. Here are three sites that I found to be useful:. Photojournalism - Window to the World. Now, for the three pictures that I like:.
jessicalosorata.blogspot.com
None of Your Business: December 2008
http://jessicalosorata.blogspot.com/2008_12_01_archive.html
None of Your Business. A place for photographic growth. Tuesday, December 9, 2008. I finally made the AT notes blog. Here's the link: AT Notes. Get as much use of it as you can. Tuesday, December 2, 2008. Do notes and posted it as soon as we could after class was done. Since I don't mind sharing my notes at all, I thought that it would be helpful to post up our school notes. So I made a seperate blog! Subscribe to: Posts (Atom).
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AT Notes: Filters for Black and White Shooting
http://analognotes.blogspot.com/2008/12/filters-for-black-and-white-shooting.html
Tuesday, December 9, 2008. Filters for Black and White Shooting. Filter - a photographic filter is made up of transparent material - glass, plastic or gelatin - with dyes incorporated so that it selectively removes specific colors or wave lengths of light that pass through it. Red, Blue Green. Red Blue = Magenta. Blue Green = Cyan. Red Green = Yellow. EX A red filter is ideal o expose for sky. It blocks or darkens green and blue (cyan). Red filter, filters our cyan, blue and green light. Expose one image...