Wednesday, 20 May 2015


These are the photographs I took in the park. We had the theme of flowers. We had to use the macro setting for close-ups. 
To do this i had to take thous photos and upload them in my computer then take them in photoshop.
to do this I had to go to file, automate, contact sheet II, and then choose the photos.

The best picture is the second one. This is the one that I would print.

The first one is the on the i changed and the second one is the regional one

Wednesday, 4 March 2015

b healthy



A man drinking alcohol and his bodys colour is changing

 A weed splif is burning

Wednesday, 21 January 2015

animation devices

zoetrope = it is a animational device that spins a round and it has type of people that moves. The modern zoetrope was invented in 1834 by British mathematician William George Horner. He called it the "Daedalum," popularly translated as "the wheel of the devil" though there is no evidence of this etymology.






Thaumatrope = thaumatrope is a toy that was popular in the 19th century. A disk with a picture on each side is attached to two pieces of string. When the strings are twirled quickly between the fingers the two pictures appear to blend into one due to the persistence of vision.


Flip book = flip book or flick book is a book with a series of pictures that vary gradually from one page to the next, so that when the pages are turned rapidly, the pictures appear to animate by simulating motion or some other change. In 1894, Herman Casler invented a mechanized form of flip book called the Mutoscope, which mounted the pages on a central rotating cylinder rather than binding them in a book.

Phenakistoscope

The phenakistoscope (also spelled phenakistiscope or phenakitiscope) was an early animation device that used a spinning disk of sequential images and the persistence of vision principle to create an illusion of motion. In 1832, Belgian physicist Joseph Plateau and his sons introduced the phenakistoscope ("spindle viewer"). It was also invented independently in the same year by Simon von Stampfer of Vienna, Austria, who called his invention a stroboscope.


Magic lantern

Magic Lantern is a firmware add-on, originally written for the Canon EOS 5D Mark II by Trammell Hudson in 2009, and ported to the 550D/T2i/Kiss X4(1.0.8) in July 2010 by the same author. The current principal developer is known as A1ex and there are now versions for most Canon DSLR's.
Because installing Magic Lantern does not replace the stock Canon firmware or modify the ROM but rather runs alongside it, it is both easy to remove and carries little risk.[1] The DSLR checks a "boot flag" in its re-writable memory, and if set, reads from a flash card to get the additional firmware routines. Each time the camera is started, there is an option to disable Magic Lantern.

Wednesday, 14 January 2015

rotoscoping

I used a video on photoshop. used the time line and I drowed on the video on an other lear