Tuesday 27 January 2009

Boom Animation


This is an animation made using Final Cut HD. The images were created by our tutor and then we had to edit them together and add visual effects, music, etc. It was helpful to learn what can be done using Final Cut, as I wouldn't have considered doing an animation/known where to create one. Unfortunately when I first opened up the software I didn't realise the settings were on Anamorphic. i.e. widescreen, so the format is a little off. But all in all a fun little learning exercise.

Monday 26 January 2009

35mm modification

There are instructions in the Holga book, but I need to see things to understand them, so have resorted to a youtube video tutorial.



This is a really helpful website, set up by a fan. Teaches you how to do modifications and the results you can expect.

Holga

Here are the scans from the first Holga film on Medium format.


Tunnel, taken using red coloursplash, didn't seem to work, possibly needed a closer subject.
Double exposure trees
Single exposure
Single exposure
Double exposure, mobile phones sat on bench/geese by the lake
Eerie double tree exposure
A single exposure as far as I can remember, the ring is created by shooting directly into the sun
Long exposure on night time setting, needed a tripod. iPod in tree
Same again
The geese were lining up and being generally wonderfully bizarre
Double exposure, face/sunlight and field
Double exposure eye/pond

Triple/quadruple exposure, car fascia/trees/bottle bank
This was actually before I'd wound the camera on properly to the first photo and created a double length negative of which the developers processed half.

I was a bit disappointed with the lack of saturation, as I had expected lots of reds and bright colours and leaks, but was pleased the double exposures worked well in some photos. Good for a first attempt and learning process.


 Tonight I'm adapting (read: bodging with black tape) the camera to take 35mm and exploring techniques and recreating them on digital as much as possible.

Saturday 24 January 2009

Drawing with Light

Unrelated to the current brief, but the other night I was helping my housemate out with her current project on smoking. These images will be photoshopped over masked out silhouettes shaded with smoke on paper depicting people smoking. 

Shot using - Panasonic Lumix DMC-FX01 + tripod

Holga

On Thursday I spent the afternoon at Golden Acre Park shooting the double exposure images using a Holga - the previous day was spent working out how on earth a Holga works. 


I've documented each stage of loading the film etc, but thought it was better left in a sketchbook with annotations.

I did a bit of research and found Dragon Photographic, which can process in an hour or a 24 hour service, cheaper and quicker than its rivals! 

Quite surprised with the results, wasn't expecting any of them to come out, however, I had expected there to be a lot more 'light leak' and colour saturation with red reds streaming across the images. Most are quite grey, but in some the double exposure is really effective. It was fun not knowing how the film would turn out, the lo-fi technology to it, the 'shoot from the hip' ethos I found refreshing. 

I can't scan the 13 images (accidentally took a long photo before I got to number 1 on the film by the looks of the negative) until Monday, but here are photos of the negatives, which I want to use on their own for a future project.


Narrative

The previous week we had a two day Narrative session. The first day was spent storyboarding our 30 second piece of action based in the college. The three storyboarding techniques are 'long shot', 'close-up' and 'extreme angles'. We then combined the three storyboards to create a final sequence to shoot the next day. 

This is my storyboard for the long shots, which demonstrate in the film a sense of distance and direction.


Come the next day however, the key bearer to the balcony (a crucial scene!) was away, so the action was cut shorter than anticipated, but we worked with it. 

After we shot the film we had to give over the film and the storyboards and allow the assigned group to cut it all in Final Cut HD. We were assigned a really good group, who had clear storyboards and well thought out action and shots and had fun editing it all together.

This is the group we edited, our film is on a memory stick hopefully to be seen again...!

Friday 23 January 2009

Internet

Just some general musings on the Internet.

Recently discovered this myspace page which caught my eye


The artist has used Myspace as a platform to create quite a distinctive page. Myspace is generally seen as the music artists way of getting attention, and is successful. Lily Allen for example built up a significant following on her Myspace to help launch her career before getting signed to a major record label. However, many of these pages can be formulaic; good for uploading songs and pictures and networking but lacking originality. La Roux have used Myspace to build their own website. The video at the top is unusual and changes the normal layout, grabbing the attention of the audience immediately, although the video does need to buffer occasionally on slower internet connections. There is also the 'touch it' box, which is a clever interactive way of getting the audience to engage with the page and not just click on to the next. This is something I learned about in the What is Visual Communication brief. 

YouTube is another platform used by artists and labels to promote their music. Recently Universal Music Group have begun to generate significant revenue as a result of users viewing the music videos of their artists. Having signed a groundbreaking deal with YouTube to split advertising revenues, they are reported to have made almost $100 million during 2008. Universals YouTube channel is the most viewed of all time, with 3.11 billion views! And the most viewed video of all time....? 

Avril Lavigne's 'Girlfriend'. Unsurprisingly, Lavigne is signed to Universal.

The video that's recently caught my eye is Coldplay's 'Life in Technicolour ii'. Firstly, because it's an unusual video for Coldplay, but secondly, and most interesting to me is that it is in HD. It's the first music video that I've come across in HD and is a sign of what is to come. However, I learned today during a conversation that the human eye cannot actually focus on film in HD as too much is in focus at any one time, and we are used to only looking at parts in focus whilst our mind perceives the rest. For example when we look at a person, only their eyes are in focus and we see the rest in our peripheral vision. 

National Media Museum, Bradford 20/01/2009

The visit to the National Media Museum was very helpful for my project, as the first gallery is the Kodak history of photography.

 'The ever-changing cultural and technical landscape has ensured that photography continues to fascinate and challenge us. Through our photography collections permanent galleries, changing exhibitions and events we reflect and explore photography's multiple roles, its history and its continuing impact on society.' - http://www.nationalmediamuseum.org.uk/photography

Spot on then! The gallery documents the beginning of photography with illustrations, information, models and early photographs (including the first ever negative) all the way through to the Box Brownie, advertisements and the up to date DSLR's. It felt quite ironic and almost sacrificial to be taking quick snaps on my digital camera of the information boards to save time and of digital reproductions of the old dauggerotypes. (I'm reminding myself of Berger - Ways of Seeing!) 
The museum also contained large galleries devoted to film, television and broadcast, animation and a photography exhibition featuring Peter Ainsworth and Tess Hurrell. The shop also sold various Lomography cameras and displayed photos taken on Holgas and Actionsamplers. I think an Actionsampler/Supersampler or fish eye lens for the Holga is next on my list. I also picked up a beautiful little photography book on the 1930's for £3.99!

Well worth a visit!

As part of the day we also had to undertake our assigned 'urban interaction' games. The game our group created was to photograph various things, worth different points - varying from a CCTV camera (10 points) a pink umbrella (50 points) to an empty bus (100 points). The game we were assigned was to take a photo of the group with each letter of 'BRADFORD' in the roads marked on a map in the shape of each letter.

Plan

Have been struggling to blog, as jotting things down and working out what to do seems to come more naturally in a sketchbook. 

Decided upon my direction with the Communication Technology brief - 

Exploring the lo-fi technology of a Holga camera, which is new to me and allows me to document my experience and what I learn from it. I have never used medium format and only in the past used a 35mm film in a Lomography camera (I broke my ColourSplash!) 

I will then contrast this with digital photography - the precision and polishing, from seeing the shot on screen immediately to polishing photos to perfection in Photoshop. 

I found Photoshop tutorials whilst trying to help someone create a CD cover for a project. One that seemed particularly straight forward was 'blending' as part of photomanipulation. The blogger who wrote the tutorial used two images and blended the two on top of each other. I therefore decided for the first film using the Holga I would experiment with double exposure, a popular technique. 

I have also decided, upon speaking to my tutor, that I will look at the history of photography and where it is going - for example digital cameras with in built GPS to geo-tag each photo in flickr, or iPhoto's new application in the revamped iWorks - face recognition and tagging.

I will compare the results of double exposure on the Holga and it's 'happy accidents' with the more precise photomaniuplation on a digital photo. 

Links;


'The unassuming Holga is here to save you from a future of didgital pixels and images shared on small screens on cameras or phones.' 

Wednesday 14 January 2009

Sandpit

Going to use this blog for the current brief 'Sandpit', examining my relationship with technology.

Technology I currently use:

Mobile phone - contact, time, camera, calendar
Internet - contact, social networking, blogs, tv (iPlayer), research, shopping
Laptop - Internet, work, managing digital photos
Digital camera - work, documentation


Technology I wish to use/understand/learn more of:

Adobe Photoshop and Illustrator - develop skills, interested in enhancing hand drawn illustrations and creating work entirely in P/I
Webdesign - looked at in previous brief, would like to learn more about
DSLR - looking to buy a DSLR, look at which model to buy and why and how to use it

Originally, following on from the introductory lecture I had wanted to research into mobile phones and where the components are made and the environmental, social and economical consequences. Or, to look at the KGOY phenomenon (Kids Getting Older Younger) as I read a Telegraph article which mentioned this in relation to the appeal of the Barbie doll. "...that makes children abandon toys earlier, but also all the other calls on their time, from mobile phones to the internet, Playstations to iPods". I think I was drawn to the KGOY thread because it genuinely saddens me to see young children hunched over Nintendo DS's or playing on the Wii rather than being outside playing creatively and with others. 

However, following the second briefing, with the hand out, I've realised I had interpreted the brief wrong. It seems I need to explore as many possible technologies as possible, and document the process. I will use this blog as much as possible, as that in itself does not come naturally - I far prefer to work in a sketchbook.

There are plenty of avenues to explore and I am still interested in researching the social implications of using current technologies.


Saturday 10 January 2009

Billboards, Thermal Paper & Tierney Gearon

Wow, so I knew it had been a while since I'd updated. Didn't realise it was a month & a half.

Saw this when driving in to Cambridge for some Christmas shopping. Poor quality as its just a quick phone snap.

The following images are experiments for a presentation on 'the fax machine', did you know the fax machine revolutionised the speed at which we receive news stories with photos?

Anyway, I found on a youtube video that thermal fax machine paper can be used with heat appliances, to create, well, pretty naff black blobs if you go by my first attempt. 


For the first two and fourth images I used ceramic hair straighteners, the third and fifth is using a hair dryer; to 'stamp' and held away, the sixth is a combination of hair dryer for the smudges and a glue gun (sans glue stick) for the more defined (attempted) animal print.

Christmas was ace, I couldn't have wished for anything more. Really great time catching up with friends & family, (and crazy family friends you haven't seen for 8 years but end up round for Christmas) eating too much chocolate and vegging out. Thanks to a genious Christmas present I am reunited with my Lumix (same model & everything!) and a rather inspired present; a Holga, which I am very excited about trying out soon. Particularly double exposures - I know its dead easy to do, but I think there are some amazing photos to be had using the technique. I've been inspired after reading an article in the Telegraph magazine from last week on Tierney Gearon (www.tierneygearon.com). She caused a media stir in March 2001, when she exhibited at the Saatchi Gallery, in I Am a Camera, with photos of her naked children. Also The Mother Project is worth a look (www.themotherproject.com) a documentary/short film about Gearon visiting her mother, which featured in the Sundance Film Festival.
Adios. x