intro to cropping

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Warm up Is my photo suitable for my article? 1. Choose one or two photos to display on your screen. 2. Have a copy of the lede for your article. 3. Pick your partner: Random name picker 4. Your task (2 minutes): a. Read each others lede. b. Look at the photo: Is this photo suitable for this article? 5. When everyone has finished reading the lede and viewing the photo a. Explain to your partner why it is or is not suitable? b. Do you have any suggestions? 6. Volunteers to share with the class.

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Page 1: Intro to Cropping

Warm up

Is my photo suitable for my article?

1. Choose one or two photos to display on your screen.2. Have a copy of the lede for your article. 3. Pick your partner: Random name picker

4. Your task (2 minutes): a. Read each others lede. b. Look at the photo: Is this photo suitable for this article?

5. When everyone has finished reading the lede and viewing the photoa. Explain to your partner why it is or is not suitable? b. Do you have any suggestions?

6. Volunteers to share with the class.

Page 2: Intro to Cropping

Rule of thirds

Rule of ThirdsPretend that the screen on the

camera is divided into nine parts.

There will be three horizontal

sections (across) and three vertical sections (down).

Page 3: Intro to Cropping

Rule of thirds

How? Place your subject on or near

one of the red dots (where the lines intersect).

Page 4: Intro to Cropping

Rule of thirds

Why?● Naturally draws attention to

the subject● Creates visual interest● Photo appears more

balanced

Page 5: Intro to Cropping

Rule of thirds“One way to explain why it works is to think of it like this: if your subject is in the middle of the image, it’s considered static. Your eye is drawn to it then has nowhere to go from there because

the object is equal distance from all sides.

Therefore when your subject is positioned closer to one of the edges, it forces your eye to follow it…to find it. This allows the

viewer to linger on your image longer. It makes for a more captivating photo because it’s almost interactive. Like a

conversation going on between the photo and you.”

Page 6: Intro to Cropping

Rule of SpaceIf the subject is not looking forward, there should be enough

space in the photo for your subject to look. This is one aspect of the “rule of space.”

Bad Good

Page 7: Intro to Cropping

Rule of Space

Page 8: Intro to Cropping

Photography: Cropping

Which photo is better?

Page 9: Intro to Cropping

Photography: Cropping

What is cropping?● Cropping means cutting a

image to remove unwanted areas in the image.

● By cropping you are creating a new photo.

● It is one of the easiest ways to edit a photograph.

Page 10: Intro to Cropping

Photography: Cropping

Why crop?1. Improve overall composition2. Focus on the main subject3. Remove distracting elements4. “Zoom in” on a subject5. Change the orientation

Page 11: Intro to Cropping

Why crop?

Improve overall compositionComposition is a way of guiding the viewer’s eyetowards the most important elements of your work.

Page 12: Intro to Cropping

Why crop?

Focus on the main subject

Page 13: Intro to Cropping

Why crop?

Remove distracting elements

Page 14: Intro to Cropping

Why crop?

“Zoom in” on a subject

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Why crop?

Change the orientation

Page 16: Intro to Cropping

Crop carefully!

Not every photo needs cropping

CROP CAREFULLY!

Page 17: Intro to Cropping

Crop carefully!

Too much cropping

It feels like the horse is going to bang its head on the edge of the frame.

Framing is too tight on the side where the action is going. This slows down the movement.

CROP

carefully!

Page 18: Intro to Cropping

Crop carefully!

Page 19: Intro to Cropping

Crop carefully!

Amputation

When cropping people or animals, do not chop off their knees or ankle.

This bouncy picture of a dog running is ruined by it’s feet not being in the frame, even though it has a good expression and is nice and sharp.

CROP

carefully!

Page 20: Intro to Cropping

Crop carefully!

Page 21: Intro to Cropping

Cropping: Tight vs. Wide

Don’t be afraid of a tight crop! If the subject of your article is “injury” rather than the specific person who is injured, this crop

could work.

Page 22: Intro to Cropping

Cropping: Tight vs. Wide

Don’t be afraid of leaving a wide crop (wide amount of space around your subject) if the background is interesting or if it is

relevant to the topic of your article.

Page 23: Intro to Cropping

Before you crop

BEFORE YOU CROP ...

Make a copy of the photo.

DO NOT use an original photo because if you make a mistake, you

may not be able to fix it.

Page 24: Intro to Cropping

How to crop?

HOW TO CROP?

RULE OF

THIRDS

Page 25: Intro to Cropping

How to crop?

Rule of ThirdsIt applies to Cropped photos too!

Page 26: Intro to Cropping

How to crop?

Page 27: Intro to Cropping

How to crop?

There are lots and lots of cropping programs available.

For all published photos in our journalism and yearbook class, we will need to use Adobe Photoshop.

TODAY: We are doing a simple crop using our

Macbooks.

Page 28: Intro to Cropping

How to crop?TODAY: We are doing a simple crop using our Macbooks.

We can use our keyboard to create a screenshot crop …

How?1. Press Command (⌘)-Shift-4. …

2. Move the crosshair pointer to where you want to start the screenshot.

3. Drag to select an area. …

4. When you've selected the area you want, release your mouse or trackpad button. ...

5. Find the screenshot as a .png file on your desktop.