iconic image questions

light source- indoor lighting

light source- all around

use lights all around and make it natural

right in front

the person is centered and looking right at the camera

light source- studio lighting

light source- right in front

use bright lights right in front of person

right in front of subject

the person is centered but looking away from the camera

Joiner Video

  1. The photographer should be stationary
  2. They can widen the view of the picture and create more depth
  3. Because you essentially do the same thing by overlapping the pictures to create on whole photo
  4. Its easier to physically put the pictures down rather than Photoshop but you can see all your pictures at once easier on Photoshop rather than physically
  5. I like the more broken up style so you can see the lines in between so it gives a more large and 3d feel

100 Most Influential Photos

It’s the most perilous yet playful lunch break ever captured: 11 men casually eating, chatting and sneaking a smoke as if they weren’t 840 feet above Manhattan with nothing but a thin beam keeping them aloft. That comfort is real; the men are among the construction workers who helped build Rockefeller Center. But the picture, taken on the 69th floor of the flagship RCA Building (now the GE Building),

I really like this photo because it really depicts what jobs where like back then

this picture gives the emotion of what real life was like and how the appreciated what they did

I think the photographer was tryin to show his viewers what people did as jobs and how difficult it was

This photo intrigues me because they are all so clam about being so high up and u can tell they like their job

 

The Hubble Space Telescope almost didn’t make it. Carried aloft in 1990 aboard the space shuttle ­Atlantis, it was over-budget, years behind schedule and, when it finally reached orbit, nearsighted, its 8-foot mirror distorted as a result of a manufacturing flaw. It would not be until 1993 that a repair mission would bring Hubble online. Finally, on April 1, 1995, the telescope delivered the goods, capturing an image of the universe so clear and deep that it has come to be known as Pillars of Creation. What Hubble photographed is the Eagle Nebula, a star-forming patch of space 6,500 light-years from Earth in the constellation Serpens Cauda.

 

I really like this photo because it shows what space actually looks like

this picture gives the emotion of amazement

I think the photographer was trying to show people what space looks like and not just a figment of our imagination

This photo intrigues me because its cool to see what space actually looks like

 

Aldrin never cared for being the second man on the moon—to come so far and miss the epochal first-man designation Neil Armstrong earned by a mere matter of inches and minutes. But Aldrin earned a different kind of immortality. Since it was Armstrong who was carrying the crew’s 70-millimeter Hasselblad, he took all of the pictures—meaning the only moon man earthlings would see clearly would be the one who took the second steps. That this image endured the way it has was not likely. It has none of the action of the shots of Aldrin climbing down the ladder of the lunar module, none of the patriotic resonance of his saluting the American flag.

I really like this photo because it really depicts what the moon looks like

this picture gives the emotion of what life could be like on the moon

I think the photographer was trying to show how amazing the moon is

This photo intrigues me because to see someone actually on the moon is amazing