Sunday, November 15, 2009

4. Amazing picture.


Photoshop has revolutionized design, photography and illustration to the point where any image that manages to capture something really amazing is quickly dismissed as fake. But, it is still possible to create jaw-dropping images without the help of a computer.
This photo named "Final Encourter" looks as it would be photoshoped in every kind of way, but it really isn't.
It was shot in december the 3rd 2006, by "werol" (deviantart.com)
So sometimes, you just get the perfect shot by chance.. and i just wanted to share this beautiful image with you :)

3. English lesson 101

Taking english lessons in school and taking english lessons in university, has shown me in which way they differ from one another.
Eng 101 emphasize the fact that you have to
create suggestions and ideas on your own and try to develop them. You learn to work independently. The lesson gives you the necessary nudge in the right direction and you have to do the rest.
Two important things i liked to mention that our teacher Sonja showed us are blogging and sharing things with others and citing images.
I never knew how cite a picture, i often just didn't do it in presentation, but from now on i'm going to use this good advice from Sonja.
Every week we are doing new things, i learned quite a lot in such a short time, and I am enjoying our English 101 lesson and i'm looking forward to the next semester, i'm excited about what will come up to us:)

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

2. "The Camera never lies." ??

I have found two interessting articles, about a fashion editor who is talking about faking pictures for magazines and other purposes, and i picked the most important passages out to share with you.

Susannah Frankel writes in today's Independent: The adage that 'the camera never lies' is as unreliable now as it ever was.Sure, there's PhotoShop and other means of digital manipulation, but even unretouched pictures often do not tell the complete story. Nick Knight is responsible for dozens of global advertising campaigns and fashion editorials. "People say I'm a photographer, but that doesn't sound correct to me any more," he says. "Manipulation is a slightly charged word, though, because it implies deceit. A skilled photographer totally manipulates the reality they have around them." Frankel points out that even Marilyn Monroe was airbrushed.The truth is, we love a pretty image. And Vogue (and other magazines) render celebrities practically unrecognizable because they know that humans are attracted to a thing of beauty. (In fact, early covers of Vogue were literally art.) Even in the early days of photography, a photograph never told the whole truth: It was black and white. Then there's the context and baggage we bring to images. Did anyone ever see the London police ads that pictured a black guy running and a white police officer running behind him? In today's cultural context, it was easy to assume the cop was chasing the black guy. But copy at the bottom of the ad told the true story: Both men are police officers, chasing a suspect who was cropped out of the picture. The black guy was undercover.In the end, whether we understand – or indeed trust – the mindset behind photographic post-production, the fact remains that almost every image in glossy magazines, billboard campaigns and newspapers (yes, even The Independent) is doctored in some fashion before it reaches print; whether it be a crop to zoom in on the unsightly nose of a political figure, or the removal of a pimple on a model's cheek. The adage that "the camera never lies" is as unreliable now as it ever was, and image manipulation begins long before the likes of Dangin and his ilk get their PowerMacs fired up, courtesy of the photographers themselves.


http://jezebel.com/391252/the-truth-about-images-that-lie

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/media/pixel-perfect-why-you-shouldnt-believe-your-eyes-when-it-comes-to-those-glossy-images-829196.html