Thursday, April 4, 2013

TED Talk

I would just like to start off by saying this has been an incredible week. I am so, so impressed by the diverse passions that my fellow classmates have thrown themselves into these past seven weeks and every single presentation I learned something new. I love this project. And I really hope, Mr. Perlman and Mr. McDaniels, that this project will be incorperated into the Gifted curriculum in the future, because it was probably the most fun I have ever had doing a "school project".

I want to admit a little secret.

In fact, it's something that I've never told any of my friends, in fear that they would think me crazy. Which I probably am.

I actually....kind of enjoy presenting. I kind of enjoy being able to share something in front of a bunch of people and just talk with them. I love that moment on stage when everyone looks up at you expectantly, and you can either wither under their stares or rise up to the occassion and try your best to give the best possible speech you can.

So did I give the best possible speech I could? Well, I honestly think this was not my best presentation. I tried to memorize my notes, but with the spotlight on me, I think I reverted back to looking down at my notecards a little more than usual. I could have given a bit more detail about the organization of my project (the whole theme thing may have been confusing) and my process. I could have engaged the audience more. I did spend a lot of time editing my script though, so I hope at least I was able to get my message across, and that my passion for photography really came through in my talk.

So overall:

Delivery:  14,5/15
Process:    9/10
Preparation:   4.5/5

Total: 28/30 (93%)

Not bad. But always an opportunity to improve. Still, I think whatever grade I do get for this project doesn't overshadow the fact that I have gained this incredibly awesome hobby :) I must thank the Genius Project for helping me discover it.




Sunday, March 31, 2013

Blog Comments!

I've commented on Annie's, Sun's and Kara's blog for week 5.

I've commented on Aayush's, Cara's and Ben's blog for week 6.

Friday, March 29, 2013

Things I Love

This is the final blog post!! Thank you to everyone who has taken the time to check out my photographs! It really has been an incredibly fun and rewarding experience for me. When I first started this project, I really did know very little about photography. Now, just about a month later, I am really proud to say that I really have become rather close to my beloved partner. Together, we've captured some pretty incredible moments.
This week, I was able to adjust all the settings for every photo that I took on the "Tv" mode on my camera. This meant shutter speed, ISO, brightness, flash exposure, and picture style could all be changed. I know I've already talked about shutter speed, so let me just quickly address ISO. Based on some research from here, ISO measures how sensitive the camera is to light. The lower the ISO, the less sensitive the camera will be to light. With lower light, you generally want to use a higher ISO (my camera goes up to 6400) if you are not planning on using flash. Under clear blue skies with good lighting, a lower ISO can be used. Kind of along the same line is flash exposure, explained here. Flash exposure basically adjusts the subject's brightness. Exposure compensation adjusts the darkness of the overall picture. And finally, with the picture style option you can choose the picture to be styled like a landscape, portrait, macro...etc. shot.
My final theme is "Things I Love". With this theme I really wanted to just reveal five things that I really enjoy or hold significent meaning to me. This was inspired by the "Ten Things I Love" challenge, this website I stumbled upon while trying to find inspiration for my theme. Of course, there are so many things I love, like coffee icecream, spring, and that moment when you think of something really funny and start laughing but no one else gets it so they think you're crazy (among many other things). But here are just five.  
 
 
1. My familyKind of a no-brainer, but I'm blessed to have such a supportive family. My mom, in particular, has been very interested in this photography project and provides good suggestions sometimes.My sister loves critiquing my photos and telling me which ones suck. And my dad has been very accomadating in providing transportation when I think of a place to shoot. I love them so much and they are awesome.
 
 2. My culture. Being a second-generation Chinese-American, I have had the privilage of being a part of two very distinct cultures. I have the privilage of eating a Philly Cheese Steak for lunch and Mantou for dinner. Of getting presents on Christmas (and my birthday) and money on Chinese New Year. Of being able to watch "Shark Tank" and a random chinese drama. The photo below shows a jade necklace and a silk scarf.
 3. The ocean. My family goes to the shore every year and among my fondest memories are crabbing on the pier at sunset and  running on along the shoreline with no one else around. I love the feeling of walking on the cool sand and the cool breeze when the sun sets. I remember the first time I ever went down to the shore, I was terrified of the sound of the waves and I sat down and started crying and wouldn't stop. But now, I love that too.
4. Music. Okay, I admit this one didn't turn out the way I wanted to. You may be asking, "what's up with the apple?" Actually, if you look close enough the earbuds are actually connected to the apple, to symbolize an ipod. Get it? Apple? Like, the company? Yeah, thinking back I don't remember why I didn't just use my actual ipod :/  
 
 
 5. Travel. Being able to explore and journey to different places is something that I've always loved to do. I really enjoy experiencing different cultures (in particular their food) and something on my bucket list is to see all seven wonders of the world. I had all the settings adjusted, but photo credits go to my dad. It looks so much better in black and white than it did in color....
 
I'm so glad I choose photography because I have no doubt in my mind that it will become a wonderful hobby even after this project. I set out on this project with the goal of finding inspiration from just everyday objects and everday places. I wanted just ONE good picture that I could be proud of. But now I have 25. I hope that you have found at least one that you enjoy as well. Thanks for reading!

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

A Day in the Life

With Spring Break finally here, I'm doing my best to try and forget that TED talks are comming FAST. In fact, I'm still in denial mode right now, which means I basically I tell myself I still have five looong days and nights to ponder what exactly it is I plan on sharing to my panel of unimpressed peers and two teachers. Which is probably not a very good strategy. But even in the midst of my busy schedule of alternating between conciousness ( where I eat and stare blankly at my pile of homework) and unconciousness, I have managed to keep up with my scehdule of taking photos.
This week's focus was on action photography, which really built off of everything that I have learned so far. Besides being able to adjust the lens and capture the best lighting, action photography really required some more toggling with my camera. The mode also required some detailed reading, which, having some time on my hands, I did. Two important aspects of action phtography are 1. shutter speed and 2. 1st and 2nd Curtain Sync Flash. I found a lot of information about shutter speed here and here. I won't bore you terribly with the details, so here's just a quick synopsis about shutter speed:

Shutter speed: Basically shutter speed is the measure of time the shutter is open. A fast shutter speed freezes an image in action, while a slower shutter speed creates a blur of motion. The slowest possible shutter speed for my camera is one second, and the fastest is 1/800th of a second (which is pretty crazy). Shutter speed is important to action photography because a photographer needs to decide whether to use a slow shutter speed and capture that trail of motion, or a fast one, and capture the subject frozen in motion. I've experimented with both effects this week.

And then there's 1st and 2nd Curtain Sync Flash. These two options are really only used for slow shutter speeds. I read a little into it, but the first few sources I found made it seem really complicated. However, after reading this I basically understood the general idea.

Slow Sync Flash: The difference between 1st and 2nd Curtain is when the flash fires. A camera actually has two shutters that form the actual camera shutter; one that opens in the beginning of the shot and one at the end. These two flashes create that light trail behind a subject that you see in those night photos. In 1st curtain, the light trail appears in front of the subject, opposite the direction of motion, which doesn't make much visual sense to me. But 2nd Curtain creates a light trail in the direction of motion, behind the subject.

Whew. So now that that's over...

This week's theme came to me after watching this documentary called "Life in a Day", which is avaliable on youtube if you want to check it out. The whole premise behind the movie was that people all over the world just videotaped their lives on one day of the year, and basically the movie consistede of little snap shots of different people's lives arranged from morning to night. Which is actually a lot more interesting then it sounds. But anyways, I wanted to follow the same idea, so I decieded to take photos of just one day of my life. I know this goes against the one picture per day plan, but I just wanted to try something new. So today, I spent every moment of the day with a camera close at hand. I isolated five different moments in my day that I think were significent and photo-worthy.



10:00 am- I was put in charge of watching my sister for the day, so I decided to spend some time outside in the morning. We had been on the trampoline for about ten minutes before my sister, being eight, declared she was bored and wanted to do something else. I cleverly asked if she wanted to try jump-roping instead and got this picture. Actually, I also took about twenty others, all of her still on the ground, so it was a bit challenging getting the timing right. 



3:00 pm- Haha, this was such an enjoyable picture, mostly because I got to be in it. This just perfectly captures my feelings after trying to get through my science homework. Photo credits go to my mom on this one, although I should have made the room brighter because the lighting is kind of bad. Shutter speed was at about 1/640 (very fast) to capture all those papers in mid-air. Not to worry; those papers wern't very important. But I did consider ripping up my thirty page Social Studies midterm review.

 5:00 pm- Preparing for dinner! Probably my favorite photo of the day. For one thing, I really spent some time trying to stage this display. The black-lidded appliance is probably not something you have at home: it's a rice cooker. Rice is a major part of the chinese diet. In mandarin, the term for "it's time to eat" is "che fan", which literally translates to "eat rice". And yes, I do eat rice most days for dinner. The hand you see is my sister's. She had a great time spilling the rice everywhere. I had less of a great time cleaning that up.

7:00 pm- My sister wanted  to go to the mall after dinner. I really don't like going to the Plymouth Meeting Mall because it's eerily silent, but they also have a pretty cool carousel So yeah, while other teenage girls walked by with their bags, I stayed for fifteen minutes in front of a carousel watching the horses go up and down while spinning slowly. I took this one after it just stopped, but you can see the spinny chair thing is still going. The girl on it looked like she was having a great time, but quite frankly, I'd choose a horse over a spinny chair any day. 

8:00 pm- Just before we left the mall, I HAD to take a night photo of cars. So I set up my tripod in front of TD Bank on Germantown Pike, right before the entrance to the highway, and snapped away. It was actually pretty exhilarating because most of the cars were going over the speed limit and you could almost feel them zoom by. I really slowed the shutter speed here ( 1/5) to get that blurry effect. After about five minutes though, my fingers were almost too frozen to click the shutter.


This was by far the most challenging mode yet. Which is good, because it means that I'm making progress and tackling bigger challenges in photography throughout the course of this project. But I also have sixty four photos of cars in the night that I had to go through before finding the one above. For all my photos, I had to take MANY many shots before I found one that got the motion at the perfect time. Next theme, I will be adjusting all my settings! With the deadline coming fast I might have to cram a little....

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Vlog!

Oh wow I am so awkward in this....

<iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/62215667" width="500" height="281" frameborder="0" webkitAllowFullScreen mozallowfullscreen allowFullScreen></iframe> <p><a href="http://vimeo.com/62215667">Vlog</a> from <a href="http://vimeo.com/user17176404">Carolyn C</a> on <a href="http://vimeo.com">Vimeo</a>.</p>

I'm really sorry that the vlog isn't showing up! Above should be the embed code, I don't know why the video isn't comming up. If you click on the first highlighted link, you should be brought directly to the video. Again, really sorry for this technical difficulty. I've been trying to fix it, but it isn't working.

Other People's Blogs!

Please take a look at these blogs! I've commented on these and all of them are really interesting!

O'Neill: http://oneill-luxem.blogspot.com
Jess: allraveledup.blogspot.com
Arielle: aripianoprodigy.blogspot.com

Still Life

I started Theme 3 with a pretty clear goal in mind. After all, the setting was macro photography, and based on what I gathered from my resources on this setting (listed here and here) all I needed to do was find some pretty flowers and maybe some insects lurking around and I would have my perfect set of brillliant nature photos. I don't understand how somewhere along the way I failed to realize that it's around forty degrees outside and still practically lifeless. And yes, I understand how good photographers are supposed to make anything turn out looking absolutely breathtaking and whatever, but try taking pictures of tree bark for half an hour (which, after about five minutes, I stopped doing). The problem with outdoor macro photography during the winter is that not only are there no insects, plants, or flowers, which usually are the subject of these photos, there's almost no color whatsoever. Color is a very important detail in such photos because it provides a heightened sense of closeness to the subject. And the only thing that I felt could spice up my photos, snow, was missing (minus a few flurries that I managed to capture one day). Photography in this setting is also a lot harder than auto and even black and white setting because camera adjustment takes a lot of patience. When I first started, some of my photos came out unfocused. This occurs because of the Depth Field Rule, which I learned a little about from a youtube video. Apparently the closer you zoom towards a subject, the less in-focus most of the subject will become because the thinner the depth field you have. I experienced this rule multiple times while trying to take my photos, which is why the photos below are not zoomed in incredibly close. For this particular week, I took all outdoor shots. I know I promised that the themes would be more personal topics rather than general ones like "nature". But since macro photography is most associated with nature shots, this set was a bit less personal and more focused on the outside world rather than myself. This theme is offically called "Still Life".


In case you are unfamiliar with art and don't know what a still life is, it's a genre of painting or drawing that deals with an arrangement of objects. Still life is a depiction of usually inaniminate objects, like cups, bowls, and fruits. But in this case, I thought "Still Life" was the perfect term to describe winter photography. As I stated in the beginning, I viewed outdoor macro photography as a huge challenge at first. But after I actually started taking my photos, I realized that winter did have life. It was subtle life, like a flash of green from the moss clinging to a rotting log, or the young flowerbuds protected in their shells from the cold. Before, I would have never noticed it, but now I really admire how even in seemingly the most barren of seasons there is a quiet promise of Spring.

This log was very interesting, mostly because it had a blend of so many shades of green and brown on it. Had it been in the midde of Spring, I'm sure that it would have been teaming with bugs and all kinds of other creepy-crawlies, which would have been perfect for a another close up. I'm a little disappointed that I didn't zoom in even closer to really get the texture of this log.


These berries seemed to particually stand out in the winter landscape.They're such a glossy, vibrant red. And they're clusetered so thickly I'm almost reminded of a pomagrantae. After seeing browns and dull greens all day, this pop of color really caught my attention.

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The first hint of Spring, daffadoils, have just poked up from the soil. This picture was a bit unfocused , probably because I was lying in the grass with the shutter practically in the middle of the leaves. But I guess it does give the picture a softer glow
 Remember when I said that I couldn't wait to see the woods evolve over time? Well, two weeks later, they look practically the same. Which is pretty disappointing. I mean, shouldn't trees be practically in full bloom by now? In the woods surrounded by bare branches, this evergreen stands out. Even a trace of snow still on it too.


Of course, these buds, protected against the cold by a thick, furry shell (not quite sure the technical term for it), remind me that even throughout the winter, life remains, ready to emerge in full force come warmer weather. Can't wait to see these bloom!

 


 It was great to be outside again, although holding my camera with my numb fingers was not as awesome. But what was awesome was the fact that my photos were in COLOR! Oh color, how I've missed you. After my first two weeks of  just playing around and not really focusing on an actual camera setting, the macro setting was really a reminder that I have much to learn. I'm really glad that I have had the chance to explore these different modes of photography though. Action mode shots next week! My old camera was really bad and motion photos never turned out pretty, but I'm really excited to see how they will look with this one!