Thursday, October 31, 2013


     Bryan Farley has a blog,  and he has four main pictures on his home page. The pictures that he captured are very good. He cropped it at a good measure. I like how in the last picture he focused it on the musician and blurred out the background. In the second picture on the homepage he did the same thing. To make things differently he could have done the opposite blur out the front and focus it on the background. 
He has a gallery of a wedding theme. Those pictures I loved because he captured the moments where the married couple would look at eachother and smile. He caught the moments where they looked so happy. Where they can act themselves around each other, and make silly faces to each other. 

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Cropping Rule of Composition



The cropped photo illustrates the rule of patterns , because you see the background and you see that there all rectangular shapes then in the bottom you see there big rectangular shapes. 




Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Cropping for better composition


The cropped photo illustrates the pattern rule of composition , because there is a pattern of palm trees one little one and one big one and it keeps going.







Friday, October 18, 2013

Composition Element of Space


In the following picture you can identify space in the pictures that we have captured. 






Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Camera Review.


Canon EOS Rebel T3i has excellent video capabilities, images and video quality. The bad is that it can be frustrating. It is hard to shoot fast things such as a pet when they're running around or sports. It's good to take videos in them but not pictures because it is hard to keep up. The T3 is about $450 but if you have more money to spend you should buy the T3i it has more video capabilities. It has significantly better performance and photo quality than the T3, and you get higher resolution, excellent video capture, and an articulated LCD. The Canon Rebel T3i takes the consumer level dSLR a couple steps closer to the mid-level Canon 60D with the addition of the rotating rear LCD screen, remote flash firing, and in-camera processing features. The T3i is heavier than the T2i because it has the rotating rear. 



Aperture Practice