Wednesday, 25 January 2017

Digital Project

In school for our final final final project we had to take pictures of our selves in in different positions and then photo shop them together to get a result like the one below! It was a fun project due to the reason that you can just be silly in it. As well that it opens your mind to a bunch of ideas that you can do! What I did was the last supper which was a painting of Jesus that was painted by Leonardo da Vinci in 1498. I tried to do my best in this but I simply could not fit 13 of my selves in one picture so I had to settle with 5. I also tried to make my picture look a bit like a renaissance painting from the renaissance.


(Up above of photo shopped picture of my last supper)
(Down below the painting of the Last supper)
Image result

Thursday, 19 January 2017

Mentor Project

Robert Capa
Robert Capa was a Jewish Hungarian war photographer who was present in many wars including WW2. Robert Capa was arguably one of the best photojournalists and combat photographers in photo history because of how close he got to the action  and how he showed the world what he and millions of soldiers see on the lines of combat.
Robert Capa was born in October 22, 1913 in the city of Budapest which is in the Country Hungary. He was born with the name of André Friedman but then changed it later to “Robert Capa” to sound more western to avoid discrimination and racism which was common in France. He fled to Germany due to being accused of being a communist sympathiser in Hungary, he then moved to France due to the rise of the Nazi party. He meet his fate in May 25, 1954 by stepping on a landmine during the First Indochina War in Thái Bình, Vietnam.
Capa was in many wars and conflicts and started his combat photography career in the Spanish Civil War in 1936 and was in China during the Chinese resistance to Japan in 1938. His biggest time in war would be World War 2 and ended his career in 1954 in the First Indochina War where he died.
Robert Capa’s photos had a lot of significance in photo history due to how iconic they were and how he showed the world how the world was the war, and the war was the world. His photographs also showed the love, hate, friendships, and hardships that those who were unfortunate enough to experience war went through.


All you could do was to help individuals caught up in war, try to raise their spirits for a moment, perhaps flirt a little, make them laugh; … and you could photograph them, to let them
know that somebody cared” -Robert Capa


Capa in Spain: Robert Capa started his combat photography career in 1936 to 1939 in Spain during the Spanish Civil War where he took one of his most famous photographs dubbed “The Falling Soldier”. He worked with his companion Gerda Taro and fellow photographer David Seymour during the conflict. Capa was in love with Gerda but when he was in a short trip in France Gerda was killed and Capa took her death very hard and did not marry at all.
Capa in World War 2: Around 1943 Robert Capa joined the war as a combat photographer in Italy/Sicily and France. He photographed all over Sicily as American troops tried to cut off the Germans from reaching the port town of Troina which was the German army’s main route of evacuation into Italy. His pictures were used all over the Allied world to show the U.S landings in Sicily and the liberation from the Nazis. The landings on Sicily set the stage for the invasion of Italy. Landing on another beach again, Robert Capa faced the deadly waves of bullets and explosions on Omaha Beach in 1944 during the invasion of France (D-Day). From there on Capa took pictures of American soldiers fighting all the way to Germany.
The death of Robert Capa. Robert Capa was asked to accompany other combat photographers to Indochine mainly north Vietnam and he agreed. It was when the regiment he was with got caught in combat, while bullets traced the air, Capa got out of his safety of the jeep to climb a hill where he could photograph the French advance. It was there on that sad day of May 25, 1954, in Thái Bình, Vietnam where Robert Capa had stepped on a landmine.
Known as the world’s best combat photographer, the photography community mourns over the unfortunate news of the demise of a loved fellow photographer. Robert Capa.

Photos by Capa:
Image result for robert capa world war 2

Image result

Now I will show my photo which is inspired by the pictures that Robert Capa took.


(IOS 3200, F 7.1, Shutter speed 1/60)
I had my friend dress up as a soldier and told him to look sad as like he had just came out of a firefight. I really like this picture and I think that it is my best portrait photo that I have ever taken.
I used the lighting room to use as a spot light on my friend as you look down and tired. There's a black board behind him insted of white and after that I used photo shop to make the picture look more aged and to put my friend in the true spotlight!

Final Performance Task

This is my final performance task where you take one photo that involves something that you enjoy and then one picture that includes things that you don't enjoy and after that you put them side by side.
I really enjoyed this project because it gave you freedom to be as creative as you want like by using what ever you wanted to show about yourself and the things that you like and dislike in life.

These are my photos that I have taken.



(ISO 3200, F 7.1, Shutter speed 1/50)                     (ISO 1250, F 7.1, Shutter speed 1/60)
The first picture is about what I like which is being with friends and not alone. Its was a hard picture to take because I couldn't get all my friends in one place and some others to look at the camera. So in turn I had to settle with the best group picture that I got to take.
Now the second picture shows what I dislike and that being is alone. While I like to be alone and that's true but I don't want to be alone in life and have no friends to hang with. And that's what I don't want in my life. To be alone.

Monday, 9 January 2017

alternative process mk.ll

Here is my last alternative process in this project, and in this one all you had to do was snap two photos and lay them on top of one another so the two pictures merge together.

A lot of my pictures were destroyed in a developing accident so with those who survived I made this photo. It shows two people building a giant water bottle, but why? Their building it for kids in Africa who need giant water bottles.