Tuesday, September 29, 2009

.:Flooded Field:.


This is a flooded pasture behind my parents house. It was shot with an Aperture of 10 and a Shutter Speed of 1/150 with a Wide Depth of Field. I used the Hue/Saturation window to brighten up the blues to give better color to the water and I lowered the greens and yellow to take emphasis off of the plant life.

.:Pepsi Trotting:.



This is a photo of my cat Pepsi in my parents backyard. I caught him trotting about one afternoon.  He is shot at an Aperture of 2.8 and a Shutter Speed of 1/60 with Stop Action. I cropped a lot of extra space out of the photo and went in with the sponge to saturate his eyes and white spots. I also desaturated the grass around him.

.:Car Passing:.


This photo was taken while I was driving down 6th on my way home from pottery. It was shot with an Aperture of 2.8 and a Shutter Speed of 1/5 with Blurred Action. I removed some weird dust spots with the patch tool and cropped the photo so the emphasis was more on the blurred action.  I used the smudge tool to elongate the blur and put more emphasis on the blurred lines.

.:Pick Up:.




This is an old truck that is sitting in my parents backyard collecting rust. It was shot with an Aperture of 5.6 and a Shutter Speed of 1/400 at a Shallow Depth of Field. I did quite a bit of retouching using the heal, spot heal, and patch tool to remove the majority of the rust spots. I also used the sponge tool to add a little more saturation to the colors. I though it would be neat to show you how this truck looked before editing. The original is the smaller photo above the big one.



Wednesday, September 16, 2009

.: World Outside :.

"World Outside" was taken of me looking outside my bedroom window. It was shot using an aperture of 2.8 and a shutter speed of 1/160. My gaze is supposed to create Implied leading lines. I used levels to create a bit more contrast and used the burn tool to brighten some things outside the window. I also removed a small scar on my nose by using the patch tool. 

.: Backyard Sunset :.

"Backyard Sunset" is a photo through a pine tree where you can see the sun setting on a field and the building in the background are of the ethanol plant. The tree branches create Actual Leading lines. It was shot at an aperture 5.2 and a shutter speed of 1/60. I used to the burn tool to saturate the sunset and to de-saturate the pine and branches. I also sharpened the photo to make it more crisp.

.: Pumpkin Harvest :.

"Pumpkin Harvest" was shot on my back porch of a group of small pumpkins from my uncles farm. The angle creates a worms eye view of the pumpkins it could also be a close up. It was shot with an aperture of 2.8 and a shutter speed of 1/4. I brightened the colors of the two pumpkins and used the healing tool to remove a small scar from the orange pumpkin. I also made the background black and white to really make them pop.

.: Old Man Willow :.

"Old Man Willow" is a photo of a tree in my parents backyard. I took this pictures crouched on the ground which creates a worms eye view. He was shot with an aperture of 2.8 and a shutter speed of 1/60. I lightened the photo a bit and used the burn tool to create more saturation where the sunset is poking in through his branches.

Sunday, September 13, 2009

.: Artist Inspiration:.

The following are some artists that I really enjoy and draw inspiration from. Despite the numbers they are in no particular order, its just to hard to pick favorites.

1. Andy Warhol

I'm a complete sell out for liking Andy Warhol. But his bright colors, odd subject matters, and high contrast is just lovable. I dont know his paintings always seem to evoke happiness which I'm always cool with.

2. Annie Leibovitz

"White Stripes" 2003



Annie Leibovitz is a portrait photographer for Vanity Fair and the Rolling stones. I really enjoy how she connects and tells stories unique to her subect. She was also the last person to photograph John Lennon alive.



3. David Muench


"Cypress Swamp"



David Muench takes some of the most beautiful landscape photo's I have ever seen. He's pretty darn good at keeping them all copy write protected so this google image doesn't give him justice. Breathe taking color and beauty in unpredictable landscapes. He makes me want to travel!





4. Sister Corita Kent


"In Touch" 1969


Corita is possibly the coolest nun to ever live. In the 60's and 70's She created these amazing pop art pieces but each one has a special lesson dealing with christianity or equality. I really think how she took something so fresh and incorporated religion into it.







5. Jim Dine

"Study for this Sovereign Life" 1985


Jim Dine's oil paintings and charcoal drawings have a this very heavy and sketchy feel to them. He draws a lot of hearts and his art often reminds me of doodling in a notebook that he's gone over and over again and again make really dark heavy marks. I think his art inspires me that simplicity and contrast can go a really long way and that realism sometimes is overrated.














Monday, September 7, 2009

.: My Life :.

My name: Angie Aman

Childhood ambition: to be an archeologist


Fondest Memory: just running around my grandparents farm with my cousins. Always going places we shouldn't go.

Proudest moment: Learning to drive a 5 speed

Biggest challenge: Trying to juggle School, Work, Bills, and stuff around the house without loosing time to just be fun

Alarm clock: My cell phone. It sings me a really nice good morning song.

Perfect Day: one where I have nothing to do and nowhere to go unless I want to.

Indulgence: dessert, music, and retail therapy

Favorite movie: mmm probably anything comic book related

Soundtrack: Probably a mix of fly leaf, paramore, cobra starship, and white stripes

Inspirations: My dad

My life is: a comedy gone wrong


Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Welcome to my blog

HELLO

this is but a test a post