Showing posts with label G.T. Portfolio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label G.T. Portfolio. Show all posts
Monday, May 12, 2014
Metamorphosis Animation
For our first 4th Quarter project in G.T. we did an Animation Video, with the theme of METAMORPHOSIS. We basically had to create a story and show one thing changing into another. We could use any of the idfferent types of animation including STOP-MOTION, Whiteboard/Chalkboard, Digital Animation, Stykz, Claymation, or Flipbook. My group used Stop Motion, Whiteboard, Digital Animation, and Flipbook.
Our story was about a girl who was getting ready for prom, she's happy, excited, and ready to have the time of her life! Her makeup magically comes on her face, her hair gets done without hands, and her dress and shoes crawl onto her. But once she's done getting ready, she realizes that she gets stood up. She's about to give up and not go to prom at all, but her friend rides by on her bike by surprise and takes her to prom. Our focus statement was Prom Stregnthens Friendship. I feel like our group did and AMAZING job on our project. I espeacially like our soundtracks that we made with Garage Band. Our class also said we did a good job. As you can see below, we got "Above and Beyond" on everything!
Friday, April 4, 2014
Words of Wisdom
During the third quarter, we worked on our second Hiki No video project. In this project we had to do a profile project. My group interviewed Jack Leonard, the head coach from Kauai Gymnastics Academy. We started this project by writing a transcript about the interview. That took us a bout a week. We had to plan the questions we would asked, the B-Rolls, the interview shots, and the voice-overs. Once we had our transcript, it was time to film! We first filmed the interview itself. The interview was about how Coach Jack inspires gymnasts. Once we had the interview done, we shot the B-Rolls a few days after. We shot the B-Rolls on about 3 days. We finally got all of the footage we needed! In class, we edited all of the footage together into one profile story. We then filmed Mia reading the part for the voice-overs. Throughout the final days of the project, w edited, and edited until the final story was good to great! Our words of wisdom are important because it inspires others to keep up with their dreams, and to remind them that if you got 2nd, you didn't loose 1st, you one second.
Wednesday, April 2, 2014
Five Tips For Preventing Injuries
During the beginning of the year, we did our first Hiki No project. The topic of our project was five tips. We had to think of five tips for a certain subject. My group decided to do 5 Tips For Preventing Injuries. Our topic basically teaches the viewer how to not get hurt. We got the idea because one person in our group, Gabby, recently fell and scrapped her arm. We thought that it would be a good idea to show people how to prevent getting hurt. Our video turned out really good, it was actually shown on Hiki No! Although, I think we could've fixed the focus of most of the shots. Some of the shots were out of focused and made the video look bad in quality. Other than that problem, I think our video turned out great!
Wednesday, March 12, 2014
Practice Profile Story
Our practice story was about how Gabby loved to dance. The purpose of it was to teach people to never give up and alwasy do what you love doing. The main subject of oiur story was Gabby. We chose to interview Gabby because she has a very close connection with her love of dance; she practically eat, sleeps, breaths dance. Of course, we could've done any other subject, such as how Mia does gymnastics, anything really, but we chose the subject that one person in our group knows the best, Gabby and dance. I feel as if we could have improved our audio. I like our practice story a lot.
Wednesday, February 19, 2014
Composition Techniques
Composition techniques are a way photographers and filmers make their story interesting. They bring personality to the subject, and make it interesting for the viewer. There are about 14 composition techniques. The main four techniques are Rule of Thirds, Framing, Unusual Angles, and Leading Lines. Rule of Thirds is when the image is not centered and more off to the side, to use Rule of Thirds, cameras usually have 3 horizontal and vertical lines to help you position your subject/camera. Framing is using natural surroundings to give more meaning to your subject, this could include bushes, trees, or even a doorway. Unusual Angles allows you to see a picture or video from another point of view, like an ant’s point or a birds eye view, this technique gives a lot of personality to the image. Leading Lines are used to lure the viewers eyes to a deeper part of the image or the important subject of the image using lines from objects around us; these lines include roads, fences, branches, etc.
Wednesday, February 12, 2014
Three Shot Sequences
In filming, Filmer's use a technique called Three Shot Sequences. This technique gives interest to the viewer when watching the film while visually describing the action. It is what gives different shots of the subject. The different shots are: Wide, Medium, and Close-up/ Extreme Close-up. A wide shot is a view of the entire area the subject is in, showing the background, what is next to the subject, and the subject itself. Medium shots don't show as much as a wide shot, although it still shows a little bit of what is happening around the subject. A close-up is basically just showing the subject from only the area that the action is occurring in. Extreme close-up's are just another way of showing a close-up, but more zoomed on the actual action; this gives the viewer more detail of the action, it lets the viewer feel what is happening. The Three Shot Sequence technique is used in pretty much every film. Below is an example of what Three Shot Sequencing looks like.
Tuesday, January 21, 2014
Polar Panoramas
Okay, so you've seen my Spherical Panorama, but now for my Polar Panoramas. To learn how to do this I researched Steps to a Polar Panorama. I learned that first you need to find a beautiful area that has a horizon. Once you find that area, you take overlapping pictures that has little detail on the bottom and the top, always remember to keep your left and right edges matching. Once you've got those pictures, open up Photoshop and then you can resize and rotate all of your pictures together. You should have a square image, once you do, rotate your image 180 degrees and add Polar Filter to your picture. After that all you've got do is edit your picture from good to great! For more information you can look at Polar Coordinates

As you can see in the first Polar, there is a picture of me. To do that my partner took a picture of me with the camera closer to my head. I loaded that picture up on Photo shop in a new tab and used the Quick Selection Tool on my image. I moved the Quick Selection Tool over a part of my image. I draged the tool over the part of the subject I was working on. A little trick is to hold alt/option over a part you don’t want in your pic. Then I simply adjusted the background color and selected the sample all layers box. To make the shadow I Copied/Pasted the image and adjusted the exposure to make a dark image and lowered the opacity to about 40%. Once I get a shadowed image I adjust it to look like a shadow on the ground.
Spherical Panoramas

These are my Spherical Panoramas I made in my G.T. class! I took a 360 degree picture that has an even amount of sky and ground in it and the sides are similar to each other. After taking the pictures, I used Adobe Camera Raw to edit the pictures, to give it that HD sort of look. After Raw, I went onto Photoshop and loaded them on by clicking, "File --> Automate --> Photomerge.
I then loaded my 360 degree pictures and they loaded on the Photoshop "Blended" together. When they loaded, I resized it into a square and filtered it using Polar Coordinates. Once I got the shape of the Spherical Panorama, I used the elliptical marquee tool and feathered the edges. Once the edges were feathered I added a nice background that suits the final picture.
Finally, I got a spherical panorama, but there were some creases. To get rid of those ugly creases I used the stamp tool to get the same look to fill in that crease. I made sure that all of the creases were covered and looked okay. This is how I made my spherical panoramas, now you can make your own!
Wednesday, January 15, 2014
Final Photomontages
Who doesn't like a photomontage of a giant stuffed panda and a girl dancing? These AMAZING photomontages were inspired by David Hockney. All I did, and you can do too, is take multiple pictures of a certain subject and edit them in Adobe Camera Raw (just to give it the more life-like look), after editing I simply combined all of the photos I took in Photoshop, added a little border and background, and Walla, two wonderful Photomontages showing a specific scene.
Friday, January 10, 2014
Magazine Cover
This is my magazine cover, Fierce Flexibility. I finished it during the fall of 2013, during my Gifted and Talented class. To make this magazine cover I had a classmate take a picture of me doing something that relates to my magazine. Once I had a good picture I edited the picture using Adobe Camera Raw. After getting that Life-Like look I opened the picture onto Photoshop and started a contour by outlining the main subject of my photo. When I had the outline, I colored in my contour by using the colors of each part of my picture. So that's the drawing part but now for the words. I made each heading by first simply typing in what I wanted to be in my magazine, this is called text layover. Once I have all of the headings typed out I added text effects. I used stroke, gradient overlay, and drop shadow. For the title I added a arch effect.
Besides the texta and drawing, I added some extra credit by adding a picture of a bar code and app bar code. I made up a fake website and had that be used for the app. For the (reasonable) price of the
Besides the texta and drawing, I added some extra credit by adding a picture of a bar code and app bar code. I made up a fake website and had that be used for the app. For the (reasonable) price of the
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