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Photography Stephanie Yarrow

Photography case studies

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Page 1: Photography case studies

Photography

Stephanie Yarrow

Page 2: Photography case studies

David Hockney

Page 3: Photography case studies

David Hockney created this photomontage in 1982. He did this photomontage by taking lots of pictures and then joined them together to make a college/montage. He would have probably printed out the pictures individually and then stuck them how he wanted them to be.

With this he would have started at the top and then worked his way down the picture till he got to the place where he wanted to stop. Now a days we would just take lots of pictures and then we would save them to the computer. Once you have done that you would click on Adobe Photoshop to get the pictures like this. You would click “file > automate > photomerge and then you would change files to folders and then Photoshop tries to create the picture.

This could be shown in museums like Art museums and maybe at an auction to be sold as someone had the photo in their house. It maybe in different art galleries displays like there maybe one for Photomontages and then there could be another one for experimental photography.

This could be a mixture of traditional and non-traditional . This is because some of these pictures were done in the dark room but other times it is done digital . Telephone Pole, 1982

Page 4: Photography case studies

Jerry Uelsmann

Page 5: Photography case studies

Jerry Uelsmann again makes his own unique pictures which is known as multiple exposures which is done in Photoshop.

This is done by 2 or 3 photographs which are joined together to create this picture in Adobe Photoshop.

1. Start by opening Photoshop up and inserting the back ground you want, then add your other picture on to the picture by going File > place to get the second picture that you want to use.

2. Once you are happy with your 2 pictures then you click Layer >New Adjustment layer>black and white and with that you can change it any way you want.

3. Once you are happy with the black and white then you will need to probably do some changing to the light. To do that you click Layer > New Adjustment layer > curves. When you get this layer if you don’t click ALT and click the layer you want to change then it will change the whole picture .

And then you get a picture like this.

This could be shown in museums like Art museums and maybe at an auction to be sold as someone had the photo in their house. It maybe in different art galleries displays like there maybe one for Photomontages and then there could be another one for experimental photography.

This is maybe a non-traditional method as it works with modern techniques. This is because you are using software on the computer .

Page 6: Photography case studies

Michael Bosanko

Page 7: Photography case studies

Michael Bosanko wanted his photographs to unique as well like every photographer they all have different types of photography .

This picture would have been set on a very, very long shutter and then left in one place for a period of time and then you get the stars moving as they are moving but we don’t see it as we are either asleep or they move so quickly that we don’t see them. The only way to see them is with a very slow shutter speed and then it shows the lines in the sky which is the stars moving and then you get this wonderful picture of the only thing that is moving is the stars.

This could be shown in museums like Art museums and maybe at an auction to be sold as someone had the photo in their house. It maybe in different art galleries displays like there maybe one for Photomontages and then there could be another one for experimental photography, this could even be up in your own home or the photographers home.

This is maybe a non-traditional method as it works with modern techniques. This would be used with a tripod, slow shutter speed and time and patients to take such pictures.