

David – October 17, 2009 6:39 p.m. Idaho Falls, Idaho F 3.2 1/8 Sony DSC-H2
David and Jason – October 17, 2009 6:03 p.m. Idaho Falls, Idaho F 2.8 1/50 Sony DSC-H2
These two photos, like the three to follow, were taken on the 17th of October where taken when a few friends went to TGI Fridays. These two images have very slight modifications. These changes are a limited amount of levels, brightness, contrast and saturation.



Shari – October 17, 2009 6:36 p.m. Idaho Falls, Idaho F 2.8 1/8 Sony DSC-H2
Nathan – October 17, 2009 6:34 p.m. Idaho Falls, Idaho F 2.8 1/10 Sony DSC-H2
Nate– October 17, 2009 6:35 p.m. Idaho Falls, Idaho F 2.8 1/4 Sony DSC-H2
These three are meant more for playing around with new actions that I found on the internet. They are really fun to mess with and I thought the design of them helps bypass some of the flaws that are present in these images initially. This, like the first two images, also have slight shifts to levels, brightness, contrast and saturation, but it’s mostly a vintage action I found from Omar the Radwan online.
–> 
Color Bars– September 27, 2009 9:39 a.m. Rexburg, Idaho F 2.8 1/350 Samsung S630
This is the luminosity tutorial that can be found on the blackboard. I never mess with channels much, so this was entertaining. I also always love the opportunity to mess with transparency locks since the possible outcomes are always interesting. The only thing I don’t like about the tutorial is that it works with the randomize button in the gradient editor which makes it harder to get to colors that one would actually like.
–> 
Albert – October 25, 2009 5:26 p.m. Idaho Falls, Idaho F 3.5 1/15 Sony DSC-H20
This is one of the many shots that I have taken for “The Assassination of Albert Einstein” photo shoot for the Advanced Visual Media project that is due tomorrow. I didn’t want a drastic change to the color, still wanted him to match of course. So, I replaced the colors to a green instead of the original tan. And, like always, this was taken without a tripod with slight changes to levels, contrast, brightness and saturation.