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Phonagraphy.com Announces The first Photo-Sharing and eBook Publishing Contest!

Phonagraphy.com Announces The first Photo-Sharing and eBook Publishing Contest. A New Arts-Oriented Photo Sharing and eBook Publishing Site to Share Royalties with Winning Contest Members.

PHONAGRAPHY

I LOVE VENICE

Venice, California-December 15th, 2012 – Phonagraphy.com, a photo sharing and eBook publishing website, has just announced its first eBook publishing contest to be launched Dec. 15th.  Phonagraphy.com aims to corral the world- wide collective of smart phone users into a cohesive force that will become the progenitors of a revolutionary type of book arts. In its efforts to help support the new genre of contemporary photographers, Phonagraphy.com is inviting “Phonagraphers” to take part in its monthly eBook Publishing Contest. The first contest begins Dec. 15th and runs through Jan.31st .

Theme based submissions will be uploaded into categories: Landscapes, People, Architecture etc. and woven into a new genre of interactive contemporary photographic eBooks to be sold via Amazon.com, iTunes etc. The diversity of humanity aligned as Phonagraphers will capture photos from their particular walk of life and up load them by theme to the image bank. Members are invited to upload images from their smart phones to anyone of the four theme-based categories via their personal profile. Themes will be changed on a monthly basis keeping the eBook publishing contests fresh and dynamic. Images will be voted on by members “Likes”, the best 40 phonagraphs per theme will be compiled into eBooks and Coffee table art books for sale through Amazon.com and the iTunes Store. Winning Phonagraphers will share approximately half of the royalties from eBook sold. A percentage will be deposited into Phonagraphy’s artist support fund.

Aside from the focus on artistic endeavors, Phonagraphy.com will focus on universal themes such as the plight of the homeless, ecological issues concerning global warming, deforestation, social unrest, etc. Members act as a collective, connecting with a common purpose to affect positive change on the planet. Their shared ideology becomes contagious thanks to the power of the Internet. Phonagraphy leverages this power, affording members the ability to stream images and ideology instantaneously over the net.

Phonagraphy.com is designed to enable members to

Set up a personal profile where they can showcase their work

Network by participating in Groups, Projects, Event sharing

Learn from pertinent tutorials and blogs.

For more information on the eBooks Publishing contests, contact David Hoptman at 805-403-2993. To learn more about the ways in which Phonagraphy.com is poised to support artists and the arts, visit them online at http://phonagraphy.com.

COMPOSTION…YOUR BEST TOOL IS STARING YOU RIGHT IN THE FACE

USE YOUR LCD MONITOR TO COMPOSE ASTONISHING PHOTOGRAPHS

You may own the most expensive photo equipment and have the latest array of software for tweaking your images but it’s all for naught if you haven’t quite figured out the fundamentals of how to put together a suitable well balanced composition. Creating a harmonious photographic composition is not easily accomplished or learned. With today’s sophisticated digital camera’s sporting high quality LCD monitors, each photo you make is instantaneously presented to you with zoom capabilities, histograms, shutter speed etc. The trick is to embrace this technology. If not, you have overlooked your best opportunity to create and “fine-tune” your composition. The LCD monitor is the best and only feature your camera has that can actually aid you in framing up your next great photograph. Just as there are clear guidelines that pertain to writing, music, and sculpture, there are similar parameters that apply to the two-dimensional arts like painting, photography, and printmaking. A strong composition, regardless of the content, usually makes the difference between a mediocre photograph and a poignant image.

Back in the day of film most of my commercial photography work was done using a large format View Camera. As a rule, when making a large format photograph, you would expose a 4/5 sheet of Polaroid instant print film to check your composition, lighting, object placement, etc., before loading your film and tripping the shutter. You would diligently check every square inch of the Polaroid making adjustments to the composition; too close or too far away, should I be a bit higher or maybe just a tad lower a bit to the right or left, lens choice, depth of field/aperture/ shutter speed etc. etc. By adopting this type of workflow, images could be refined one Polaroid at a time. When the composition is right in conjunction with the lighting, time of day etc. its time to pull out the film and make the photo. This workflow model fits perfectly with today’s digital cameras LCD monitor. The photographer now has instant feedback with every click of the shutter – just as the Polaroid did for large format photographers. Today, you can compose, shoot, check your LCD monitor, adjust, re-shoot, adjust, and re-shoot as many times as necessary until you feel comfortable with what is happening inside your camera’s viewfinder. In essence you are becoming your own best critic each time you post up another shot.

Creating a good composition is a dynamic process just as are all creative endeavors. We all approach image making, interpretation, and expression of self differently, as we are unique individual seers. Creating a good well-crafted composition takes time, patience, thought, consideration, experimentation and of course being at the right place at the right time. “Dynamic Mode” – relative to composition – is acting, interacting, and reacting to what is going on around and within you…then reflecting, composing, fine-tuning and finally capturing your image. If you are not working dynamically in conjunction with your LCD monitor when framing up your next photo, you are missing the mark!  Hence, your efforts to stalk, capture, and display your trophy images will more than likely translate into a cliché or worse yet, mundane imagery.

The relationships of objects within a scene are affected as you raise your cameras vantage point higher or drop down lower as well as from side to side. There are lens, aperture, and shutter speed choices to make as well as pointing the camera from level, up, down, and side-swing. These are all choices one makes when composing, and each adjustment will affect your composition. Computing all the variables in creating a good composition can be overwhelming for anyone. Adopting a “prescribed workflow” means taking compositional efforts step by step. You will begin to see how one adjustment affects the whole; thus leading to the next adjustment, and perhaps the next, until you have created a good, well-balanced, poignant image.

When out scouting around for a photo OP I try to stay focused on light quality, shadows, color, or any other type of stimuli that will attract my attention and draw me in. When drawn to something that attracts, or strikes a chord, approach the scene and begin a visual exploration – then check the scene in the viewfinder. The more deliberate you are while composing, the more intimate you will become with the physicality of the scene and its particular nuances. More times than not, if you are dynamically composing, you will intuitively be drawn into what the particular environment is emoting. You may very well discover what normally would have been passed by, due to the half-hazard “point and shoot” syndrome which should be avoided at all costs. There will be various aspects to consider when you are staking out your first compositional take. Make one compositional adjustment and see how it affects your overall composition. Continue no matter now many times you need to make adjustments until you are feeling confident about your image capture! Click, make your final assessment using the LCD monitor, then pack it up and move on.

What I personally have discerned after teaching photography for many years, is generally when students go out to shoot they are stuck in the point and shoot mentality. They discover suitable subject matter to photograph but don’t take the time, or have the where with all (prescribed workflow) to concentrate on composition…the primary target! The common scenario is to raise the camera, point and shoot, check histogram, adjust the exposure if need be, re-shoot, then move on to the next image without closely studying and refining their composition. This type of mindset is not easily overcome. It is habitual for the most part, and originates from naiveté assuming that photography is as easy as point and shoot. This nonchalant approach to photography is pretty much a dead end, and certainly not a dynamic way to get involved with the magical experience of image making and creative process. Slow down and be in the moment while you are out composing your next award-winning image. The proof will be obvious in your future photographic compositions.

COLLABORATIVE ART CREATIVE PROCESS

by David Hoptman

Collaborative art projects are really nothing new but what is new is the ability to connect and collaborate with like-minded people anywhere on the planet in real time. With the advent of the world wide web, smart-cell phone technologies and the arrival of Phonagraphy.com it is possible to connect and collaborate with just about anybody on the planet no matter where or how far.

Historically a great part of our survival skills have been honed collaboratively throughout the millennium, from hunter and gatherer’s to fierce high tech armies that are designed to protect a way of life. A family unit is a collaboration designed to help secure the continuation of the human species.

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Intuitions

by David Hoptman

in·tu·i·tion n something known or believed instinctively, without actual evidence for it.

log·ic n sensible rational thought and argument rather than ideas that are influenced by emotion or whim.

Keep in mind when reading this blog that abstract thought must be dealt with in an abstract manner!

From time immemorial there has been great deliberation and profound speculation regarding the actuality of intuition. When we elicit this word we have little or no tangible basis for dealing with it is a concept. It is a mercurial and mysterious process that we as human beings are all familiar with and yet when one tries to solicit this course of action within a logical or rational context it in essence vaporizes and is lost somewhere between cause and effect.   Many of us have personal experiences in our lives where we have relied upon intuition and have full faith in the knowledge that it truly exists. This presents a problem inherent with syntax not in a grammatical sense but in a more abstract and less logical sense.  Logic and intuition do share a common ground, without one the other would not exit.

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Create Astonishing Digital Photographs With HDR

by David Hoptman

HDR / High Definition Resolution photography software is definitely one of the greatest additions to Photography since the onset of pixels. HDR allows photographers’ to capture a dynamic range not previously possible before. HDR software allows the photographer to make multiple exposures per scene; exposures will range from highlights all the way to the deepest of shadows. With a little de-saturation as stated in the above article and some basic color balancing techniques most HDR images could pack a more realistic punch and in my opinion appeal to a larger and more sophisticated audience.

HDR / High Definition Resolution photography software is definitely one of the greatest additions to Photography since the onset of pixels. HDR allows photographers’ to capture a dynamic range not previously possible before. Dynamic range is the contrast ratio between the lightest and darkest areas within a scene. Film and digital capture prior to HDR lacked the latitude to capture a scene with an extended tonal range, common example that we have all been confronted with: a bright sunny day with deep shadows and blasting highlights.

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Intuition Creative Process

by David Hoptman

Jung believed that a human being is inwardly whole, but that most of us have lost touch with important parts of our selves. Through listening to the messages of our dreams and waking imagination, we can contact and reintegrate our different parts. The goal of life is individuation, the process of coming to know, giving expression to, and harmonizing the various components of the psyche. If we realize our uniqueness, we can undertake a process of individuation and tap into our true self. Each human being has a specific nature and calling which is uniquely his or her own, and unless these are fulfilled through a union of conscious and unconscious, the person can become sick.

The creative process, whether dominated by the ‘psychological mode’ or the ‘visionary mode,’ “consists in the unconscious activation of an archetypal image, and in elaborating and shaping this image into the finished work”, which is then a unique and particular manifestation of the archetypes—interpreted and presented in a manner appropriate for a specific time and place.

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Believing in Your Yourself and Your Art

You became an artist because you have a gift to share. Innately, you know that to be true whether anyone else does or not. Look around the room and see your work. Can you remember the reasons that you made the various pieces that are right in front of your eyes? Each person’s reason is different for why they create. Some do it when they are happy. Others create when they are sad. For some people, it is a combination of both.

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Cultivating Creativity in Your Children

By Cindy L. Adkins

If you have young children, it is likely that there seems to a shortage of hours in the day to multi-task your way through it. Nonetheless, as you cleverly arrange bath time, nap time, story time, and every other word with “time” attached to it in a day, that precious commodity seems to slip away from you while there is barely a minute left for “me” time, right? So, how will you find a moment to help your children cultivate a new activity that equals “shared” time for all of you?

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Healing Through Art

By Vyacheslav Shevchenko

In the summer of 1992, I just returned from one of my trips to the mountains. I brought home a series of paintings, and as I was looking through them, I got a phone call. It was a friend of mine – an art critic. He told me that there is a man who wants to visit my studio – a man who holds an important position in the government. I said yes, and we met with him next day in my studio.

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How Community Arts Organizations Are Using Social Media

In this article, takes a look at how some groups are using social media to tell their stories and build a community around their work.

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