Friday, April 25, 2008
Tony Howell
online artist 5

As the semester is coming to an end, I'm starting to think more of how I can further use my creativity in developing my images. Maybe I can use a little bit more of Photoshop for digital alteration of my images. I found this image above, and I started to think of maybe combining different flowers to give a different feeling and patterns. At the same time I am beginning to also like the macro focus of an object or in the case of what we have been doing in our class...macro focus of the flowers. Your use of depth of field definitely gives you a different outlook. I am much aware of how I approach my subject within my work.

As the semester is coming to an end, I'm starting to think more of how I can further use my creativity in developing my images. Maybe I can use a little bit more of Photoshop for digital alteration of my images. I found this image above, and I started to think of maybe combining different flowers to give a different feeling and patterns. At the same time I am beginning to also like the macro focus of an object or in the case of what we have been doing in our class...macro focus of the flowers. Your use of depth of field definitely gives you a different outlook. I am much aware of how I approach my subject within my work.
Wednesday, April 23, 2008
Finally...it's done











I'm proud that I was able to create two books this semester. You can imagine my excitement when both of them were finally published on Blurb. For my California native plants book, I took some of my best pictures and applied some texts that came from my blog and some I wrote specifically for the book. I felt I have learned so much during the field trips that I can't help but share the information that I have gathered. I must say, I had a very good feedbacks from some people. My husband took the book to his work, and one even suggested that the book would be good for tourists. My intention in creating this book is to make awareness of the beautiful native plants, trees, and Rock Art we have here in California. Sadly, they are sometimes the last thing we think of, when we start making developments for new housings, schools, businesses, freeways...etc. Part of my goal is also for people to see the beauty and understand more of the use of the native plants. So here is some taster from my book.
Monday, April 14, 2008
wildflowers everywhere
Wednesday, April 2, 2008
Joel Sartore
Online artist 4

Joel Sartore is a photographer for The National Geographic. "The frontiers are mostly gone now, and so is our connection to the land. No generation has ever been as far removed from the natural world as we are today." In his gallery, man vs nature Santore explores our relationship to nature. From Caribou in front of an oil refinery in Canada to the Bonneville Dam in Washington/Oregon, he presented how we build system and factories with the cause of nature. The shelters of animals, fish, nature, and etc...are being taken away from them. No longer they have a safe place to live in as a new factory, dam, and even a new highway is built in place to the wilderness they were familiar with. Sartore believes that we seem to forget about that we are all in this together. What is good for nature is good for humanity.
I thought Sartore's pictures are compelling. I do feel like we are becoming more detached to nature. This reminds me of our class, and how we have talked about how California is big in development. We are further threatening the shelters of animals who can't rally for their rights to have a safe place, and also as we talked about in class, the destruction of historical sites such as some of the Native Rock Art.
The above image with the mother bird and baby bird especially got my attention maybe because I am also a mother. I can see she is protecting her baby, just like how we humans need to be protected.

Joel Sartore is a photographer for The National Geographic. "The frontiers are mostly gone now, and so is our connection to the land. No generation has ever been as far removed from the natural world as we are today." In his gallery, man vs nature Santore explores our relationship to nature. From Caribou in front of an oil refinery in Canada to the Bonneville Dam in Washington/Oregon, he presented how we build system and factories with the cause of nature. The shelters of animals, fish, nature, and etc...are being taken away from them. No longer they have a safe place to live in as a new factory, dam, and even a new highway is built in place to the wilderness they were familiar with. Sartore believes that we seem to forget about that we are all in this together. What is good for nature is good for humanity.
I thought Sartore's pictures are compelling. I do feel like we are becoming more detached to nature. This reminds me of our class, and how we have talked about how California is big in development. We are further threatening the shelters of animals who can't rally for their rights to have a safe place, and also as we talked about in class, the destruction of historical sites such as some of the Native Rock Art.
The above image with the mother bird and baby bird especially got my attention maybe because I am also a mother. I can see she is protecting her baby, just like how we humans need to be protected.
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