Sequential Images : Vision
I was thinking about how sometimes people fail to notice the world's inherent beauty as I was making my own sequential images. They might be spending their entire lives in that make-believe environment, unable to experience the wonder because everyone goes about their daily lives from morning to night. They really do need to occasionally take a break from their monotonous daily lives to fully appreciate this beauty and showed my point of view through the sequential images. That is my concept of putting down my spectacles, see outside and close my eyes to feel it.
I started by taking images while seated in a café chair next to an empty glass wall in the university library with the assistance of a friend behind the camera. I had a 14 Pro iPhone. Since I was indoors and there was ample natural light, I set the ISO to 200 and the aperture to the lowest setting. In order to edit the set, I shot the photographs in jpeg. I also shot in RAW, which meant that I had a color version of every image since I wanted to have the option of color. To have a fair selection of options for each segment of the sequence, I shot roughly 20 photographs.
These are the Photoshop contact sheets I created during my picture shoot. I opened Photoshop and selected File, Automate, and Contact Sheet from the top menu. The pop-up dialogue box that opened allowed me to select my file of sequential photographs from my photo shoot, and Photoshop instantly generated the contacts. The completed contact sheets were saved by choosing "File & Save As," and then saving them to my computer's desktop as a png file so that I could upload them to my blog.
Reflection:
I was generally satisfied with the concept and lighting aspects, but I had to choose how to arrange them to create the effect and convey the message I was trying to convey. I made the decisions and then worked on organising them in a clear order.
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This is okay however I do think you could have made more interesting images here. If it was about eyes perhaps the girl shoud look directly into teh camera - this in itself would have made it more engaging to the viewer
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