Skip to main content

Draft 2

For this Draft, I combined David Gillivers little people with the outdoors to try to set up scenes in which they were not interacting with other little people but other bigger things like the environment and other things. For example, I used things I see every day like an can or the ping pong balls. I tried to make it look like they were trying to solve a problem and help each other. 
















Comments

  1. These photos look very good and I think that you have a good idea of what your goal is. There seems to be a lot of construction and I was wondering if you were going to move away from that in the future or if you are going to stay with it.

    ReplyDelete
  2. These images are awesome. You did a great job arranging the little people to make it look like they were interacting with other little people and objects. Your best images are the ones where the little people are pushing or actively doing something. I think the ones were they are sitting are good but are not as strong as the active images. Great Work!

    ReplyDelete
  3. I think these are great. You did a great job of incorporating the everyday objects into the pictures and using them to tell a story with the mini people.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I love the ones where you can tell easily that it's a tiny person interacting with a bigger object, like the soda can or the bottle cap ones. I think the inclusion of more of these types of shots will go a long way, maybe they could interact with books, tables, chairs, pens?

    ReplyDelete
  5. I really like this set of photographs and especially the ones where the little people are interacting with an object. I think you could make these photographs even more interesting by trying to tell a story in each scene.

    ReplyDelete
  6. The figures in these photos look very purposefully arranged in creative ways. I like how the figures are interacting with different parts of their surroundings in poses that are the same, but look very different in different contexts. However, the photos themselves are sometimes out of focus, overexposed or focused on the wrong part of the frame, such as the background instead of the foreground where the figures are.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Hello Pablo! I enjoyed looking over your draft this week and i think you've made great improvement from the last. You did a good job having the figures interact with the world around them. I like the one of the guy climbing the net. The ones where they're actively doing something are the most successful. Nice job!

    ReplyDelete
  8. Nice job Pablo! These photos seem very creative and you did a nice job on having them look like they're carrying out a daily task. Keep up the creativity!

    ReplyDelete
  9. Good job Pablo! I really like how in many of your photos, the characters are very life like and seem to actually be doing work, for example the photo of the man lifting the soda can tap. However, some of your photos did not seem too realistic regarding physics. I think as you move forward in your project, make sure you are getting the right angles that make the small, inanimate people more dynamic.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Slo-Mo

Slo-Mo For this batch of images, I tried to bring out the colors often making the photos seem unnatural and that you can not really tell what the photo is of. I tried to capture the light trails leaving the main point that I originally captured moving the camera from side to side and upside down to make these trails and manipulate them in ways that I liked. I also found that some of the images looked better in black and white. I used a density filter to take these photos during the daytime because I couldn't take them at the shutter speed necessary to make the blur. I hoped that the light trails coming off the subjects in the image reminded you of something electrical and futuristic.

Portfolio

My Portfolio For my Spring Project, I transitioned from the small figures in a scene to architecture. What I would do is I would walk around and take a picture straight up a building or capture part of the building in the frame. I tried to divide the frame with sharp angles that defined the edges of the building and frame. Or I just shot in a straight line up the building as opposed to straight towards it. Over the past two weeks, I did my best to master this technique and here is my result.