Tuesday, November 30, 2010

I Love Food!

Thanksgiving has officially become my favorite holiday, for multiple reasons.
A) Food
B) Family
C) Food
D) FOOD.


Here are some photos I took!!







Yeah I know, there are some random foods in there... It's thanksgiving LUNCH as well!!! :)

(P.s, I wasn't here for the movie Baraka... but I heard it was good!!!)

-Babs

Thursday, November 11, 2010

One shot at One shot

For today's in class assignment, we had to take as many pictures as we could, but then only upload ONE. Meaning we couldn't choose, we couldn't change our mind, we couldn't even photoshop. We had one chance to pick the best photo. This is mine!



I thought it was pretty cool... of course, I had a hard time deciding.... but that's just me!

-Babs

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

The Philadelphia Story!

I was recently in a production of "The Philadelphia Story" where I starred as the lead, Tracy Lord (a.k.a Katherine Hepburn's role) Here are some photos from the show... enjoy!









-Babs

Thursday, November 4, 2010

I GOT A PHOTO OF THE DAY!

I think that is quite an accomplishment! One thing off my bucketlist! :)

Here's the winning photo:




Yay me!
-Babs

NOTES!

These notes are on a movie we watched in class.

Brownie:
  • first camera that was affordable enough for anyone to get.
  • Was a small box (portable)
  • Before that, photos took long amounts of time, and they were extremely formal
National Geographic (at the time, a failing science magazine) began the movement to reproduction of photos in magazines/newspapers.
  • Made photography very popular
  • Took pictures of places people wouldn’t normally see (Tibet, etc)\
  • They also pioneered the color photo
Edward Curtis: Took photos of Native Americans
  • Thought they were a “dying breed”
  • Romanced the photos (Some were staged or costumed)
Pictorialists: Made photos look like art (paintings). They did a lot of work while developing them (like using different chemicals and such)
Straight Photography: Replaced the romantic pictorialists and their doctoring of photos with something more true and real. (Around time of Picasso) Many aspects of photography (like framing) came from this era.

WWI and its effect:
  • Photos were now of people (not shapes)
  • They portrayed American Soldiers as Valiant
  • ALL of them were staged or taken from great distances
  • NO DEAD PEOPLE IN PHOTOS!
  • After the war though….
  • Photos of dead soldiers appeared in magazines in such in an attempt to keep America out of the Second World War.
Tabloids!
  • Took outrageous photos to try and get the most readers
  • Most were staged, and some were even doctored.

-Babs