Monday, May 6, 2013

FINAL PROJECT

DUE: 05/07/13


PROPOSAL:

For my final project I want to do a series of digital photographs. I want to use people as my subject and draw different patterns on their faces. My intent is to take these photographs with a white or black background and give a professional look to them, almost as if they could possibly be found in a fashion magazine. I then will be putting these photographs into photoshop to boost colors and contrast where I feel is needed.

RESEARCH:

Since I want to be drawing on people and then taking photographs of them, I found an interesting artist, Alexa Meade, who does paintings on people to make it seem as though it is a paining on a canvas, when in fact it is actually a person that is the canvas. I would like to do my research portion of this final project on this artist. I feel as though, although we are not going to be doing the exact same thing, we have similar aspects, like drawing on people, that are the same. I feel like she is an interesting artist that I am eager to find more information about.

ALEXA MEADE:
Alexa Meade is a young artist that makes artwork that lies at the intersection of painting, photography, performance, and installation. Instead of doing the traditional representational paintings on canvas, she creates her paintings directly on top of the physical subjects that she is referencing. After painting her subjects, she photographs them. The representational painting and the subjects being referenced appear to be the same as the three-dimensional space of her painted scene, which end up becoming optically compressed into a two-dimensional space. Ultimately, she makes three-dimensional living things in our world look as if they are just two-dimensional paintings and nowhere near a real life image. Meade gets live models to help her with her paintings. She paints layers upon layers on the models with acrylic paint. She paints the surfaces of the human subjects, foreground, and background into one continuous plane.


PRODUCTION LOG:

My final project centered around the medium of digital photography. To begin my project I had to find volunteers to be my models that would allow me to draw on their face, as well as photograph them. I was able to get three friends to be my models for this project, Kayla, Jess, and Zana. Each girl allowed me to draw on them whatever pattern I wanted and were overall great models.

To begin, I found a light grey sheet in my house and hung it in my basement. I wanted a light, neutral color in the background to allow great amounts of contrast and shadows to show up in my photos. I then found a clip light that I shined on different parts of the girls while photographing them. The light allowed me to direct where I wanted my lights and darks in the pictures and helped me enhance the contrast for the photographs. In some pictures, I also had a fan going. I included a fan in some parts of the photoshoot to have the model's hair have movement and not just look boring by sitting in the same position in each picture. In order to have the light, fan, and camera going all at once I whatever models were not being photographed help me with the fan and the light. I directed them what to do, as well as sometimes stopped photographing and moved the light exactly where I wanted it, as well as the people too. The models not only helped me by posing but also with the production of the photoshoot, which was a super big help.

Originally I was planning on painting each girls faces the patterns. After a lot of thought and listening to what some of the girls are allergic to, I realized using actual paint was not a great idea do to the fact that some of the girls may break out in hives. I then decided to try washable face paint, since it is intended to be on a persons face, however, it did not go onto each girls face how I wanted it to look. I then resorted to using mainly red lipstick for each model. The lipstick did exactly what I wanted and was easy to apply to each person's face.

These are some of the many original photos (almost 300) that were taken from the photoshoot before edited:

Original Photo

Original Photo

Original Photo


After taking all the photos I then had to do the tough part of narrowing down the photos I felt were best for my project and which did not go. Also, do to the fact that 300 photographs is a lot, I had to narrow down the pictures because of this too. I then made separate folders on my computer to organize the photos by who they were taken of. This was a major help with staying organized, otherwise when printing the photos, it would be hard to keep them in proper stacks and in a specific order.

I put each photo into photoshop in order to create the look and feel I wanted for this photo shoot series. I played with the contrast, brightness, vibrance, levels, and color balance. I spent most of my time on the color balance aspect in photoshop. I wanted to give each picture either a blue/violet feel to it or a blue/turquoise look. I made sure to make the contrast an important aspect also when editing these photographs. I always love how high contrasted pictures look and feel that by having high amounts of contrast it adds more interest and eye appeal to photographs, than subtle contrast differences.

These are some out of the 184 photos that were narrowed down to my final photographs that were used in my final series:

Original Version Can Be Seen Above


My Favorite Picture In The Entire Series








Original Version Can Be Seen Above











Original Version Can Be Seen Above
After taking individual photos of the models I then had them do shots in pairs. I made each type of pairing that could be made, however, I was not able to have all three girls in one shot do to the fact that I needed someone helping me hold the light. These are a few of the many taken and edited:





After I was finished taking the photos of each of my models, my friends thought it would be fun if they were to take similar photos of me, the artist, so I can too have photos like them. I allowed them to make whatever pattern they wanted on my face and had them play one of my favorite songs while they photographed me so I would be dancing and have a less serious mood then I had them do in their photographs. I then edited the pictures of myself and made them black and white to differentiate them from my series of photographs. I also wanted the book to show at the end who the artist was and make who I am different from who they were:







After I was finished editing the photos I decided I wanted to display my series in a photo album so people are able to flip through the book to easily see all the photograph at once. I printed each photo out on matte photo paper, which made the photos look better than I thought they were going to look when printed out. I then narrowed down my final photos and placed the photos in specific orders. Each page has certain photos on it based on what I felt looked best with each other. Some photos have similar looks than others so I wanted to keep similar feels together, rather than make the pages random. These are some photos with how the final album looks:






SELF EVALUATION

I thought this final project was a lot of fun. I was very happy and appreciative that I was able to find three great models to help me out with this assignment. I was afraid at first that I was not going to find volunteers because I would have to paint their faces and most people are turned off by that, however, I am so grateful that these three allowed me to do this. While taking the photos the only thing I thought was challenging was getting all three girls to focus and stop fooling around. Due to the fact that we were all friends, at certain times it was hard to get each one to pay their full attention and be serious without laughing. Overall, I thought each girl did listen to my directions well and that I was able to get really great photos from the shoot.

My favorite part of the project was editing the photographs. Although it took a very long time to do, I thought I did a really good job with the editing. Although I am not sure if they can be put in a fashion magazine like I originally wanted to aim the look of these photos to be, I think they still look professionally done. The only aspect during the editing process that I think I had a bit of trouble with was staying on one direction with the tones of colors. Some of my photos have a blue/violet tone to them, while others have a blue/turquoise tone.

If I could do anything to continue this project further than I would make a series in black and white. I loved how the photographs of myself came out in black and white and I think it would have been awesome to make a second album with the colored photos in black and white. Each photo had great amounts of contrast which would make for a really interesting black and white composition photograph.


Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Project No. 6

4/23/13

For this assignment we had to make a rotoscope.

For this piece I had to make a rotoscope. This was my first time ever making one so I am very satisfied with how it came out. My rotoscope consists of 28 different slides that were put together at a speed of .03 seconds. I chose to make the background change colors rather than keep it as one solid hue because I wanted it to be more eye catching and interesting to watch. The model I used for this rotoscope was my younger sister, Brandi. I had her do jumping jacks for me. I choose to fill the entire body in with black rather than do outlines because I wanted it to look more obvious where the movement was happening.

Project 5

4/7/13

For this assignment we had to play around in illustrator.

For this piece I played around with different shapes and opacities. I wanted to have my drawing not just have solid colored shapes, but have the different shapes with different opacities to show how they look different when overlapping with another shape with a different color or shade. 

Monday, March 4, 2013

Midterm Portfolio

Due 3/5/13

We had to choose 6 pieces we felt were strong enough to fit into a portfolio


For this piece I combined 3 separate photos, one of myself and two friends. When taking these photos I purposely made the lighting dramatic with huge amounts of contrast. Originally, because these were 3 separate photographs to begin with, the flooring on each one was slightly different and tinted. I choose to have the person on the right's (me) flooring as the dominant flooring. I changed the girl on the left's flooring to match the right's by using the cloning tool in photoshop. I also added a shadow because the original one got erased. I then incorporated the middle girl in the back by making sure she was smaller than the other two because she was farther back. I added a small shadow to the left of her but decided to keep the lightness on the right to make it look like a continuation of the light flooring on the right of the piece. 
This photo was taken in Rhode Island. I played around with color selection in photoshop, as well as enhanced the color, contrast, brightness, and gamma correction.  The colors in the original photograph had a more yellow and orange tint to it so I wanted to bring out the reds and greens in this piece instead. I used contrast and vibrance on this piece to make the photograph pop out at the viewer more. Especially since the two main colors are opposites, the contrast helps enhance the visual appeal of the photograph. The contrast also helped define shadows in the photograph more as well, they are now darker and less subtle.
For this piece I used a photograph I took of a lake at The College of New Jersey. I manipulated the photograph by boosting the colors and contrast. I wanted the water to look more blue than it originally was and more vibrant. I also wanted the water to have an icy feel to it, the contrast helped me achieve this in the picture. I also think the contrast helped make the blueness of the water stand out more against the green plants surrounding it. Overall, I am happy with how this piece turned out.
For this piece I used a photograph I took in the fall at The College of New Jersey. I really liked the composition of this piece and how you are able to see the leaves, and litter that the lake is filled with. I manipulated the photo by boosting the colors to make the Minute Maid wrapper stand out more when put up against the deep blue colors. I also put a lot of contrast on the photograph in photoshop. I think the contrast helped make the blueness of the water stand out, as well as the leaves.
This piece I originally manipulated for the color correction assignment. I, however, decided to fix a few things I realized could have used some more work. This photo was taken in the Dominican Republic. The original photograph before I manipulated has the parrot very dark and it's colors were not very noticeable. I played with the brightness, saturation, and vibrancy in photoshop to be able to lighten up the bird to be seen better. By saturating the colors, I was able to restore the vibrant colors a typical parrot posses, that this parrot lost in the picture. I added contrast to the photo to make it a more pleasing to the eye photograph. 
I choose this piece because I believe it looks the most realistic out of all my manipulated photographs that I pieced together in one composition. The floor originally was from a photograph I took in Long Beach Island on the boardwalk. The alley and buildings were from a photograph I took at Rhode Island School of Design. Lastly, the graffiti walls were taken on a road in New Jersey. I tried making the floor and the buildings look as much as possible life-like and realistic. I added shadows and used the stamp tool in photoshop to accomplish this. 



SELF EVALUATION

Overall, I think I did a good job on these pieces. I think my manipulation of the photographs were good and made sense for each thing I did. My favorite photos I manipulated out of these 6 would have to be the first one (three girls) and the last one (alley way). I liked these a lot because I was building a composition rather than correcting one like I did in the other four pieces. I think the way I cut these pictures and assembled them makes both look realistic for the most part and how an original photograph could have looked like in real life, which was my intent and goal so I am happy. 

I also feel accomplished with how the other four pieces came out. For these I mostly did color corrections and manipulated the photographs to make them look better than how they originally did. I am very happy with how the parrot picture came out. I re-did this piece twice to make sure I accomplish what my vision for this piece was. After the first time of manipulating and color correcting this photo I liked how the bird looked but not the background, in some ways the background was too vibrant for my liking and I wasn't too happy with it. I then fixed it by only changing how the bird looked which I am glad I did because as an overall piece I think it looks a lot better, so I am happy I stuck with my instinct on that piece. I think the two water pieces I manipulated look great. I really like the rich blue color I made the water in each piece and both compositions in general. I think they are both striking pieces, especially because of how I made the vibrant blue and contrast. I also think I did a good job with the brick wall photo (second piece). I really like how I changed the colors to look a lot nicer than the original photograph and draw your eye in more. I think I did a good job with playing around in the color selection tool in photoshop for that piece. Overall, I am happy with all the work I have done to this point in the semester.

Monday, February 25, 2013

Project No. 4

Due 2/26/13

COLOR CORRECTION
For this assignment we had to do color corrections on photographs in photoshop. By changing the saturation, contrast, brightness, tones, etc... I was able to accomplish this

BEFORE
AFTER
This photo was taken in Rhode Island. I played around with color selection in photoshop, as well as enhanced the color, contrast, brightness, and gamma correction.  The colors in the original photograph had a more yellow and orange tint to it so I wanted to bring out the reds and greens in this piece instead. I used contrast and vibrance on this piece to make the photograph pop out at the viewer more. Especially since the two main colors are opposites, the contrast helps enhance the visual appeal of the photograph. The contrast also helped define shadows in the photograph more as well, they are now darker and less subtle. 
BEFORE
AFTER
This photo was taken of my mom and grandma from a while back. Because it is such an old photograph, the colors have faded and have some marks all over. I first blurred the background so I would be able to get rid of the white specks. I then played around with selective color in photoshop so I would be able to get the colors to look more lifelike and real. chose to adjust and bring out more blues and magentas, since the piece has primarily yellow, red, and orange tones to it. I then adjusted the contrast, brightness, and levels to make the photograph seem more life-like and less of an ages picture. I wanted the coat that was white before the photograph was taken to now have it's white color restored. I also adjusted the contrast because since the dark bushes behind the people are so dark, I wanted the people to stand out more and be the focal point of the photograph, rather than be washed out with the rest of background. The contrast between the dark bushes and the bright colored people help make both people pop. 
BEFORE
AFTER
This photograph was taken in the Dominican Republic. I played around with the photo's levels to make it not as dark. The original photograph had the parrot extremely dark, where they are normally filled with bright colors. I wanted to make the colors be shown more so I played around with contrast, brightness, saturation, and vibrancy. I wanted to make the piece brighter to get rid of the darkness. I then used saturation and vibrancy to restore the colorful colors the parrot has. I then adjusted the contrast to make the bird stand out more.

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Quarter Term Portfolio

Due 2/12/13



We had to choose 3 photos that we took or manipulated as pieces part of our midterm portfolio. 



For this piece I used a photograph I took in the fall at The College of New Jersey. I really liked the composition of this piece and how you are able to see the leaves, and litter that the lake is filled with. I manipulated the photo by boosting the colors to make the Minute Maid wrapper stand out more when put up against the deep blue colors. I also put a lot of contrast on the photograph in photoshop.

I choose this piece because I believe it looks the most realistic out of all my manipulated photographs that I pieced together in one composition. The floor originally was from a photograph I took in Long Beach Island on the boardwalk. The alley and buildings were from a photograph I took at Rhode Island School of Design. Lastly, the graffiti walls were taken on a road in New Jersey. I tried making the floor and the buildings look as much as possible life-like and realistic. I added shadows and used the stamp tool in photoshop.
For this piece I used a photograph I took of a lake at The College of New Jersey. I manipulated the photograph by boosting the colors and contrast to make the water look more of a vibrant, icy blue color.