On our trip to Le Etacq, i photographed around 300 images.
Edits
SET 2 – these 3 images show the different natural colour tones as well as ridged surfaces which make up our geopark.
SET 3
SET 4
SET 5
Photoshoot evaluation
my images turned out well but they lack in variation, a lot my images are close ups of the rock shapes but not as many of the landscape. I believe due to the overcast that day, some of my images lack in texture and depth due to a very flat lighting, to improve this, I would go out on a sunnier day and capture more of a shadow.
For my L’Etacq Geopark trip I managed to photograph around 150-200 images to use to create multiple edits and then further develop into creating a ‘joiner’. I chose around 20 photos which I wanted to edit on Lightroom. Below are some of my best Lightroom edits:
Overall, I am happy with the way my edits came out after exporting. I really like the effects of the black and white because it has great contrast towards the earth like colours being brown, green and a slight orange. Also, the coloured images look really good through the way the sky reflects on the brown rocks and green land.
a UNESCO(The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization is a specialised agency of the United Nations aimed at promoting world peace and security through international cooperation in education, arts, sciences and culture.) -designated area containing one or more sites of particular geological importance, intended to conserve the geological heritage and promote public awareness of it, typically through tourism. A Geopark is about more than rocks. Jersey is a strong contender for this special designation because of our Island’s exceptional geology and our important cultural heritage which forms the outstanding surroundings we enjoy every day. Whether exploring Jersey’s diverse landscapes or seascapes there is lots to discover and inspire
David Hockney is an English painter, draughtsman, printmaker, stage designer and photographer. Within his photography he is famous for something he did called ‘joiners’. During the early 80’s Hockney began to create ‘joiners’, now they are photocollages. When he first began to produce these he did them with Polaroid prints and later on he did them with 35mm, commercially processed prints.
Hockney’s work reflects his long running interest in optics and perspective and sees him extend it onto family members and friends as well as landscapes and interiors. We are presented with familiar figures from his prints such as Ann Upton, Celia Birtwell and Gregory Evans as well as familiar settings such as the Grand Canyon and the pool of his home in Los Angeles. Whereas before Hockney had dismissed photography as ‘All right if you don’t mind looking at the world from the point of view of a paralysed cyclops-for a split second,’ here we see him engaged in a new fascination with the medium. After so long challenging himself across the mediums of paint and print it is unsurprising that he would finally come round to the medium that descends is often described as ‘drawing with light’. What he saw as a fixed viewpoint became something fluid and dynamic when doubled endlessly to create a composite image.
Freda bringing Ann & Me a Cup of Tea
With works such as Freda Bringing Ann & Me A Cup Of Tea he pushes the medium even further, allowing the coloured background to add another element to the composition, while details of the scene spiral out from the middle. Meanwhile in George, Blanche, Celia, Albert And Percy, London, January the traditional family portrait is subverted, the many photographs adding layers of time and movement, documenting changes in expression and light, to become a tableau vivant.
One of Hockney’s most famous works in this collection is Walking In The Zen Garden At The Ryoanji Temple, which shows the famous Japanese garden only lightly fragmented, its quiet seriousness lifted by the repetition of the mismatched red and black socks at the bottom of the frame. This way of making prints became a crucial part of Hockney’s work while travelling and there are a number of photo collages from Japan as well as numerous road trips in America, including a composite image of the view from the south rim of the Grand Canyon which adds another layer of complexity to this already unfathomable landscape.
How he created joiners was by taking multiple and varying Polaroid shots or photolab-prints of an individual subject. Then with these shots he would arrange them into what almost looks like a patchwork, to create on overall image. One of Hockney’s first ‘joiners’ was a photomontage of his own mother. Aiming for a Cubist feel, he established this through taking shots at different perspectives and at different times. His work ranges from Landscape, Pearlblossom Highway #2 to portraits, Kasmin 1982, and My Mother, Bolton Abbey, 1982.
This is probably a closer description of how we see the world – from multiple viewpoints that are then pieced together by our mind. In this joiner by David Hockney he has tried to create this effect out of 24 Polaroid prints. He did this because he was interested in how we see and depict space and time. His is interested in how we turn a 3 dimensional world into a 2 dimensional image, how perspective is used in western art and how space is treated differently in non-western art. He did not particularly make joiners because he liked the novel effect of using photographs in this way. However, he did like the way this technique allowed the viewer to read space. He sometimes laid the images out in a neat grid.
IMAGE ANALYSIS
This piece is called Gregory and Shinro on the Train. In this image the focus is primarily on the man in the image, captured looking in different directions whilst the lighting captures different parts of his face. You can also see Hockneys hand in the bottom left hand corner. The lighting is coming from the outer squares and drastically changes depending on where you look. The colours in the image are also mainly quite dull so the red seats catch the viewers eye especially as they’re positioned closer then other aspects of the image. The other subjects in the photo are looking away from the camera, but the main subject is looking towards it although not making eye contact.
After colour coding my images and editing them, I went back and gave starts to all the images I took specifically for the joiners. I then just adjusted some of the images so that they would all be similar.
Settings:
To make an auto joiner in photoshop you’ll need to have the images ready in a folder and then find the photo merge button (file > automate > photomerge). Then there will be an option to open your folder and select your images. This will then take up to 5 minutes to create depending on how many images you have, so if you have a lot then you can just do 10 or 20 at a time.
Final Joiners:
————-Manual———
for this joiner I used 30 images
for this image I used 36 images
————-Auto———
more experiments using less images
————-3D———
For these edits I just used the ‘3D’ tool which is just on the top bar in-between ‘Filter’ and ‘View’. I didn’t enjoy this method because I don’t think they turned out nice and are quite boring. In my opinion they look better as flat images.
For this photoshoot we went on a geo walk around Jersey’s coast line. Our aim was to take photographs of different types of granite. You can tell the difference through the colour of the crystals, size and patterns.
We started at the L’Etacq car park (red) and took pictures of the rocks in that area (took round 20 minutes). I focused on different granite textures by taking close ups and different angled images. When we were done, we moved to the little beach (Le Pulec) that was in the same area (blue) and focused on the same thing. The rocks there were cave like, which looked interesting, so I took multiple images of it in order to create a joiner later on. After an hour , we moved on from L’Etacq and walked up the little hill (pink) all the way to Le Pinacle. Being up there gave us a nice view of the rocks at L’Etacq. We stayed at Le Pinacle for about an hour focusing on the same things.
Contact Sheets:
I took around 460 photographs during my walk.
After flagging I was left with 103 images.
After colour coding I was left with around 25 images.
Here I went through all of my photographs and flagged them using P (images to keep) and X (images I wouldn’t use), did this twice. Then I went through them for a third time and colour coded them in order to get my final selection. (red-no, yellow-maybe, green-yes)