Monday, September 30, 2013

Lines are marks made by a pointed tool: brush, pencil, pen, etc. Lines can vary in width, direction, curvature, length, or color.

i like this photo because of they way the wall came out.

i like this painting because of how the ball reflects to him and every thing els.





Shapes are formed wherever the ends of a continuous line meet. Geometric shapes such as circles, triangles or squares have perfect, uniform measurements and don't often appear in nature. Organic shapes are associated with things from the natural world, like plants and animals.

i liked how they used there hands to make the star.

i like this painting because it shows god doing something about evil.




Color wheels show the primary colors, secondary colors, and the tertiary (intermediate) colors. They also show the relationships between complementary colors across from each other, such as blue and orange; and analogous (similar or related) colors next to each other such as yellow, green, and blue. Black and white may be thought of as colors but, in fact, they are not. White light is the presence of all color; black is the absence of reflected light and therefore the absence of color.
i like the water bottles because of how the colors go in the water

i like this painting because of how the waves move when there is a storm



Value, or tone, refers to dark and light; the value scale refers to black and white with all gradations of gray in between.  Value contrasts help us to see and understand a two-dimensional work of art.
i like how the money stacks on each other 

i like this painting because of how it looks 3-d


Form describes objects that are three-dimensional, having length, width, and height.

i like the little statues 














Thursday, September 26, 2013




Avoiding Mergers i like this one because it has the big army truck and the guy with the bandana  




Simplicity i like the colors and i just found out what w t c means world trait center

r.i.p 

Thursday, September 12, 2013

aperture button 1 .an opening, hole, or gap 

shutter button 5.a device that opens and closes to expose the film in a camera. 

exposure button 1 .In photography, exposure is the total amount of light allowed to fall on the photographic 

depth of field button 11 .is the amount of distance between the nearest and farthest objects that appear in acceptably sharp focus in a photograph.

f-stope button13.a camera setting corresponding to a particular f-number.  

focal length button 17;.the distance between the center of a lens or curved mirror and its focus.

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

1.The effect came to be known as the "camera obscura" which is Latin for "dark room". This was the first camera. The hole acted like a lens, focusing and projecting light onto the wall of the dark chamber.

2.In the 17th century, the modern camera came one step closer when Isaac Newton and Christian Huygens perfected the understanding of optics and the process of making high quality glass lenses.

3.A glass lens, a dark box, and film. 4.Light passes through the lens, into the camera, and exposes the film.

5.digital cameras capture the images with an electronic sensor called a CCD.

6.The camera will completely control flash and exposure. On most cameras this is labelled "auto", on others simply "A". Some cameras only have (P)program.automatic-assist, just point and shoot. Unlike full auto mode, you can usually control flash and a few other camera settings.

7.To attempt to blur out the background, camera will try to use the fastest available lens setting (aperture).

8.To freeze motion, camera will use the highest shutter speed possible.

9.If the subject is somewhat off-centre, the auto-focus may be fooled. 10.no flash. There are many cases where you may not want flash at all. The mood of the photograph can sometimes be more dramatic when the natural light is used.
11.In most camera modes, Auto-flash is enabled by default and will automatically fire if the camera thinks it needs more light.
12.Too much light and the picture will be washed out. 13.Not enough light and the picture will be too dark.
14.is used in every aspect of photography to represent a relative change in the brightness of light.
15. 1 16. 2 
17. more light 18. less light 19.Before light reaches film, it must pass through an opening called an "Aperture". The aperture is like a pupil. You can control the aperture by setting the "Aperture Opening", also known as an F-Stop.
20.The longer exposures ( like 1 second ) give much more light to the film