Tuesday, September 30, 2008

.x.Addicted.x.



So I'm sitting here picture surfing on flickr instead of taking my own... and I stumbled across a users profile. The photographer's name is Kevin Sanchez and I think I just spent over a half an hour look at his work. He mostly photographs people and usually women and they're taken at a lot of crazy angles, he seems very creative. Check it out!!

http://threefourmedia.com/


**UPDATE** Found another awesome site!! I just can't get enough web browsing today, it's like candy for some reason...

http://www.ibarraphoto.com/

Here's hoping you don't get sucked in too! =P and if you do.. plz share your links with me. I'm picture hungry.

Sunday, September 28, 2008

IS3 - Underwater Photography



I would love to learn more about underwater photography. When I was in Hawaii with my family a couple years ago I took a bunch of pictures at Molokini island, turtle bay and Hanuama Bay while snorkeling. I loved diving down deep and trying to get the brightest ones - it was a real challenge since we were only snorkeling and not scuba diving, meaning we had a very limited air supply. The pictures didn't turn out the greatest however because I was only using underwater disposable cameras with very little flash. I'm really interested in learning all challenges to underwater photography. It seems like an art in itself!

Here are a few websites that caught my eye:

www.frazierproductions.com (really neat - takes underwater fashion too)
http://seethesea.free.fr/index.php
www.flickr.com/photos/26996819@NO8/sets/72157606178745688/


A few photos from the sites I found:

http://www.frazierproductions.com/portfolios/8-/images/55
I really like this photo because it was unlike any other fashion photographs I have ever seen. The photographer takes pictures of models, fully clothed and with makeup... underwater. I really like the composition in the pictures as well. There's a lot of reflection of the water's surface and it makes for some pretty cool effects.


http://www.earthshots.org/2007/08/tompot-blenny-by-thomas-vignaud/
This is an excellent picture of a Parablennius gattorugine, commonly called a "tompot blenny". I'm not actually sure what that means exactly but it looks like a fish that camoflauges into corral at times. I love the detail of the picture and how vivid the colors are. Great compostion and the photographer really told the story by isolating the fish and having it blend into it's surroundings.


http://www.flickr.com/photos/26996819@N08/2520792234/in/set-72157606178745688/
This last photograph is by a man named Macro Waagmeester. Out of all the underwater and ocean photography I found, his was the most interesting. This picture is of a pink anemonefish and I love how bright and colorful it is. The lighting is great and he did a great job catching the picture.

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Light Refraction Photography


Here's a cool flickr account to check out. The photographer's name is Alan Jaras and he specializes mostly in light photography. Possibly different than anything you've seen... Alan photographs light patterns passing through transparent objects on film, using glass and plastic as mediums. The results are extremely impressive, with each picture completely unique from the next.

Enjoy!

www.flickr.com/photos/alanjaras

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Industry Studies - "Lines"




Our second Assignment in Industry Studies was the study of lines. I really enjoyed it because I'm a big fan of geometric patterns in pictures and thought I could probably get a couple with this assignment. Most of the pictures on the slideshow are taken in a tire yard (spent a little tooo much time there haha) and overall I think they turned out well despite not really knowing what to shoot initially. I just took a simple enough idea and ran with it!

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

If I could go back in time to meet anyone...




...It would definitely be my Grandpa Bud. He was my mom's dad and from what I've heard, a really great guy. I've heard stories of how he was a real jokester - pulling pranks and cracking jokes at all of the family dinners and get togethers. Unfortunately I never got to know the man that lit up the room and kept people laughing all night long because of a terrible tragedy. He was killed in a car accident when I was just a few months old. I was my mother's first child and thinking about how hard that must have been for her at that time and how she pulled through makes me so sad and also makes me feel so much respect for the strongest woman I know. I'm not sure what it's like to have a Grandpa but I know that I would have loved every moment if I had.

Let's get this blog ball rolling!



Hi Everyone, Carly here
This is my first entry and so I'll tell you some things about myself so we can get to know each other a little better. I'm 21 years old (the big two two in a couple weeks) and I've lived in Winnipeg all my life. I became interested in photography when I was little looking through my dad's photo's and slides. There were thousands of them and I spent endless hours looking through his albums and holding up the negatives to the light to see the images clearer. My dad had his long elaborate (he can really talk an ear off) stories and for a little person I had incredible patience. I was fascinated by all the places he had been and what he had seen. Soon after my parents bought me my first film camera. It was a minolta and nothing special really but something to start off on. I took pictures literally everywhere I went and it became my little hobby. From then on and through junior high and high school photography remained one of my favorite hobbies but nothing more than that. Near graduation I thought seriously about persuing a career in photography but instead tried a year at Red River in Technical Communications (which I later discovered was actually one of the most boring careers possible for my personality - most technical communicators end up in a cubicle writing manuals and other extremely disinteresting things) and one year at U of M. After the two years I realized that I was still in the same place... I knew I had an interest in Biology but couldn't see myself making a career out of it... and I really liked taking pictures. So I looked into local photography schools and found Prairie View. I really liked how PV was exclusively a learning environment for Photographers and everyone was really friendly and welcoming when I came for my interview. I was extremely pleased when I found out that I had been accepted! I'm very excited about the program and looking forward to learning all I can but specifically about the darkroom, portrait photography and HDR.