Thursday, December 16, 2010
My Typography
In this project, we were assigned to take pictures and add fontings to them. The pictures and the lines from the poems we used had to clash well together. The poets our class used were Connie Wanek and Louis Jenkins. Using adobe photoshop we were about to use many tools such as gradient tools, and blur tools to adjust and edit our photos. We also downloaded many varieties of fonts to use. In my photos, I have a total of five Connie Wanek works, and ten Louis Jenkins work.
Friday, December 3, 2010
Thursday, November 4, 2010
Helvetica
Helvetica.
This one font style is significant into bringing new and interesting designs that capture the eyes of people. I learned that helvetica is a font that seems to be plain but it isn't. Unlike sandscript, helvetica does not have hooks at the ends of its letters. (All of what I'm typing is in HELVETICA font) I didn't notice how helvetica is used so commonly in today's world. Helvetica is used everywhere, on the streets, in books, magazines, walls, etc. It is the mose widely-used typeface. Helvetica was developed in 1957 by Max Miedinger with Eduard Hoffmann. It's significant includes the ability of being used for many variety times without bringing the same taste and feel to it. Otherwise, those signs would become boring and old. My response to the movie is that it was boring. I found it unappealing, and not interesting. Although I find the idea of helvetica and it's importance interesting, the movie lacked excitement that would catch your attention.
This one font style is significant into bringing new and interesting designs that capture the eyes of people. I learned that helvetica is a font that seems to be plain but it isn't. Unlike sandscript, helvetica does not have hooks at the ends of its letters. (All of what I'm typing is in HELVETICA font) I didn't notice how helvetica is used so commonly in today's world. Helvetica is used everywhere, on the streets, in books, magazines, walls, etc. It is the mose widely-used typeface. Helvetica was developed in 1957 by Max Miedinger with Eduard Hoffmann. It's significant includes the ability of being used for many variety times without bringing the same taste and feel to it. Otherwise, those signs would become boring and old. My response to the movie is that it was boring. I found it unappealing, and not interesting. Although I find the idea of helvetica and it's importance interesting, the movie lacked excitement that would catch your attention.
Wednesday, October 27, 2010
Slide Show

Monday, October 18, 2010
This Week's Project: Retro and Vintage Look
This week we are focusing on taking a object/part of one of our photo and pasting it onto one of our inspired photographer's photos, or the other way around. The objective of this project is: to make the object that is pasted into the new photo look as realistic as possible. Our goal is to make that object look like it was originally taken with the other surroundings in the picture. We are expected to use Adobe Photoshop during this project. In Adobe Photoshop, we will be using tools that include: Magic wand, blur tool, transforming, Hue/ Saturation, earser tool, and more. At the end, we are to display 5-10 pictures that have been completed from the project, and a print out of our best work.
Wednesday, October 6, 2010
Homage to Photography
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Photo one: Prophecy of Sisters |
Pearls in the rain |
Trapped below an attic |
The second photo "Pearls in the rain" was influenced by his work "A Dream of Pearls." I wanted to bring out the characteristics of a pearl necklace, especially during the rain. Usually when I think of rain, I associate that will sadness and gloomy. But having the pearls there brought a sense of beauty to the rain, lightness, and happiness. Also in this photo, I used the reflection of water from the rain. In a lot of Clarence John Laughlin's work, there is reflection of an object. In "Pearls in the rain" the water is used to give a little reflection to the pearls and calming feeling for the picture.
"Trapped Below an Attic" was a photo I took, which was influenced by Clarence John Laughlin's work in general. In this picture, I focused more on darkness and eerie, rather than light and happiness. In his photos he doesn't really have a piece of work where the object or place gives a happy feeling, but they were rather mysterious and dark instead. His photos make you stop and think about the deeper meanings to it. This last photo is more surrealist than the others. It wasn't based off of beautifulness etc. Instead, it captured the darkness of an attic, and how shadows and light play with each other.
Tuesday, September 21, 2010
Clarence John Laughlin
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A dream of Pearls |
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The Strange Sisters |
Basic Information:
Clarence John Laughlin was born 1905 and died on January 2, 1985. He was an american photographer, best known for his surrealist photographs of the U.S. South. Laughlin was born into a middle class family in Lake Charles, Louisiana. His rocky childhood, southern heritage, and his interest in literature influenced his work. As a kid, he had a close relationship with his father. When his father died in 1918, his grief over the lose was very overwhelming. He began to have a deep suspicion of religion when his priest falsely promised that God would save his ailing parent if he prayed hard enough. His suspicion surfaced his most frequent works. Even though he dropped out in high school, his large vocabulary and love for literature were used for captions to accompany his photography. Laughlin discovered photography when he was 25 years old. He taught himself the basic camera skills, using a simple 2 1/2 by 1/4 view camera. He had a wide range of photographic styles and techniques including capturing straightforward geometric abstractions.
His work:
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