In the first picture the color contrast and the weight is evenly distributed on both sides of the picture, making it balanced. In the second picture, the hills on both side of the picture balance the image, and the clouds on the left side of the picture balance the weight. Lastly, the last picture isn't balanced because the subject of the picture is only on one side, making it unbalanced.
By the end of class students will be able to differentiate between subject and background as evidenced by finding a picture with a clearly defined subject and background, and one without. By the end of class students will be familiar with the Brightness/Contrast image adjustment, as well as other image adjustments, as evidenced by finding a dark image and brightening it up. By the end of class students will be able to manipulate Layer Styles in Photoshop as evidenced by creating a stroke around an image of their choosing, adding text to the document and then a drop shadow to the text.
By the end of class students will begin to create new layers and apply effects to them as evidenced by adapting this information to an image of their choosing.
By the end of class students will be familiar with the Photoshop interface as evidenced by creating a Photoshop document that labels the Menu, Options Bar, Tools Panel, and Layers Panel.
DLT: By the end of class students will be able to import and export an image from Photoshop as evidenced by doing so and uploading the resulting image to their website.
DLT: By the end of class students will be familiar with certain image formats- jpeg, raw, psd, png, pdf- as evidenced by defining or describing each of them. jpeg- Most commonly used format/compression for digital images.
raw- A file that has not been compressed, encrypted or processed in any matter. psd- photo shop document png- An extensible file format for the lossless, portable, well-compressed storage of raster images pdf- a file format that provides an electronic image of text or text and graphics that looks like a printed document and can be viewed, printed, and electronically transmitted. |