CHECKLIST – BLOG POSTS TO DATE

You have a deadline for the end of this week to ensure that all your work is completed. Please use some of the lessons, your study periods and own time to review and reflect on your work and focus on refining and improving it.

Below is an outline of what each of your blog posts should contain. Use it as a checklist.

Hamptonne Portraits

  • Research Tom Kennedy photographer. https://littleriverpictures.com/photography
    Examples of his work and image analysis.
  • Contact Sheets – Your portrait photos using natural light at Hamptonne workshop
  • Image Selection – select your strongest images (explanation)
  • Image editing – screen grab / explain any editing you have done (lightroom or photoshop)
  • Final Outcome – present your final image or images.
  • Compare – to your photographic reference (Tom Kennedy)

Hamptonne Objects

  • Contact Sheets – Your photos of objects at Hamptonne eg: shoes, pots, pitch forks, cloths, bath tub etc.
  • Image Selection – select your strongest images (explanation)
  • Image editing – screen grab / explain any editing you have done (lightroom or photoshop)
  • Final Outcome – present your final image or images.

Hamptonne Interiors/Exteriors

  • Contact Sheets – Your photos of building at Hamptonne eg: internal and external
  • Image Selection – select your strongest images (explanation)
  • Image editing – screen grab / explain any editing you have done (lightroom or photoshop)
  • Final Outcome – present your final image or images.

Jersey Museum – Corn Riots

  • Information on People, Power, Protest exhibition.
    Explanation/ explore how the right to protest has shaped and influenced the Island that we know today. History of The Corn Riots.
  • Contact Sheets – Your photos of exhibits.
  • Image Selection – select your strongest images (explanation)
  • Image editing – screen grab / explain any editing you have done (lightroom or photoshop)
  • Final Outcome – present your final image or images.

Environmental Portraits

  • Definition – What is Environmental Portrait Photography.
  • Mood board – examples of Environmental Portrait Photography
  • Research an environmental photographer/photographers.
    Examples of their work and image analysis.
  • Photoshoot Plan – who, what, where, when, how, why
  • Contact Sheets – Your environmental portrait photos.
    Single Person / Two or more people.
  • Image Selection – select your strongest images (explanation)
  • Image editing – screen grab / explain any editing you have done (lightroom or photoshop)
  • Final Outcome – present your final image or images.
  • Compare – to your photographic reference (environmental portrait photographer)

Heritage Objects / Studio

  • Mood board – examples of Object Photography
  • Research – Object photographer.eg: Walker Evans
    Examples of his work and image analysis.
  • Contact Sheets – Your studio photos of the heritage objects.
  • Image Selection – select your strongest images (explanation)
  • Image editing – screen grab / explain any editing you have done (lightroom or photoshop)
  • Final Outcome – present your final image or images.
  • Compare – to your photographic reference.

Experimentation – Photomontage & Digital Manipulation

  • Mood board – examples of Photomontage Photography
  • Research a photomontage photographer.
    Examples of their work.
  • Process – photos that explain any manual editing you have done. (cut n paste)
  • Process – screen shots that explain any digital editing you have done. (photoshop)
  • Create – produce a GIF to extend your task.
  • Final Outcome – present your final image or images.

GET INTO GOOD HABITS
Every blog post you create will cover some or all of the 10 step process below:

  1. Mood-board, definition and introduction
  2. Mind-map of ideas
  3. Artist References / Case Study (must include image analysis)
  4. Photo-shoot Action Plan
  5. Multiple Photoshoots + contact sheets
  6. Image Selection, sub selection
  7. Image Editing/ manipulation / experimentation
  8. Presentation of final outcomes
  9. Compare and contrast your work to your artist reference
  10. Evaluation

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