Class hours: 9:40 – 2:05
Mr. Bohmann
wbohmann@ewsd.org
Week Seven
Today’s Notes
- Today is an EHS A Day
- Food Drive – CAWD2
- FAFSA Forms Day is October 19th with VSAC @ CTE- 9:30-12:00pm. Register here!The FAFSA is the Free Application for Federal Student Aid. Once submitted, you and your family will find out what kind of financial aid you qualify for. Even if you have LeBron kind of money, it is still a good idea to complete. You can always decline the aid.
- October 26th – College Visits:Champlain College CTE Conference Room 10-11am
- Vermont State University CTE Conference Room 11:15 – 12:15
- Ready for digital design(CAWD Sweatshirt): Finn, Schuyler, Matt, Eric, Kaden, Ryan
- CCV Classes tomorrow –
- Camera batteries – make sure they are charged
- Using Edits and feedback, produce a final version of your resume. The version you will submit will be a PDF. Filename:ResumeFinal_Lastname.pdf Dropbox is in Google Classroom
- End of First Quarter is Friday, October 28th – Two Weeks!
9:40 Attendance
9:45 FireDrill
You know the route – attendance and stay together.
10:00 Graph of the Week
Head over to Google Classroom to figure out what is going on in this graph. Surely you must have some personal connection to this. Let’s hear about it.
As I say each week, identify what is going on in this graph and explain it to someone who cannot see it.
When you are done, read through the section below.
10:10 Reading (Independent) Leading Lines in Photography
What Are Leading Lines in Photography?
Leading lines are lines that appear in a photograph that have been framed and positioned by the photographer to draw the viewer’s eye towards a specific point of interest. These lines often draw the viewer’s eye in a specific direction or towards a designated portion of the photograph.
4 Types of Leading Lines in Photography
Some of the categories of leading lines include:
Horizontal lines: Horizontal leading lines are often found in nature and landscape photography. Often used when shooting with a wide-angle lens.
Vertical lines: Vertical lines draw the eye up or down the composition and can be used to convey status within your picture. Vertical leading lines are often found in fashion photography and street photography.
Diagonal lines: Diagonal lines are used to create a sense of movement and change. If you’re working with a large depth of field, try experimenting with diagonal lines to accentuate the sense of depth in your image.
Converging lines: If there are converging lines present in your frame, it’s best practice to situate the subject of the image at the axis of these leading lines. A good example of this is Matt’s railroad track image below.
– QUICK READ (4 minutes)
10:15 Morning Photo Walk
Using manual mode we’ll head out to the front of the school. We are going to shoot some foliage and look for some leading lines to guide our compositions. Proper Exposure and in focus subject. So what f/stop would be good for in focus foreground and background?
10:35 Break
10:45 Visual Literacy in 30 Minutes!
Let’s breakdown a scene together….
Visual Literacy is the ability to understand, interpret and evaluate visual messages.
Mise en Scene: Translates to Placing on Stage
This includes all of the design aspects of the scene. This may include costumes, props, lighting, character placement – basically anything to aid in the visual telling of the story.
Camera Angles Shootout – let’s look at the basics / knowing the basics will make a better film!
Let’s look at another clip. What do you think the artist is trying to say?
Mr. Bohmann’s reference pages on visual literacy. Lot’s of information for you to reference including Copyright Free resources.
11:15 May the Force Be With You
Quick Meeting –
- I am working on…
- I am going to finish…
Production Time with your Group. Things you might consider…
- Review Trello Board
- Make a list of props
- Work on Storyboard (requirement)
- Scout location
- Test special effects
- Work on scripts
- Outline job responsibilities
- Test filming
12:15 Lunch
12:45 Photoshop Lesson – Clipping Masks
Steps to complete this process. Make a copy for your files.
Sample Image 1 or you can use a photo that you took. Sample Image Silhouette
1:10 Break
1:20 20% Production Time & Guided Support
20% Project – Due Monday, October 18th
Motion Tracking Due Today
Resume Final Version due tomorrow (Graded Version, no typos!)
Paper Draft – CAWD Sweatshirt design due tomorrow