Author Archives: leslie

Photography in my Art Journal

Check out Jasmin and Traci's posts.

I use 3 main ways of getting the images from my cameras and into my journals: sketches, toner transfer and Pogo printer. The toner transfer and pogo prints require me to transfer the image into my computer. After that I decided how I’m going to print them.

When I use the pogo I often trim the images to look like mini Polaroid prints using this method. If I decided to simply print the image the Pogo will center and crop it to fit. It works best if you shoot in 2×3 mode, if your camera has a setting that allows you to chose. Otherwise you can import it into Picasa and edit it so it’s also 2×3 and have it cropped exactly the way you’d like and then print via the Pogo.
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When I use a toner transfer I usually paste the images into a M!crosoft Publisher document so I can make the pics the size I want and fill an entire page with the images. (See a video on one of my toner xfer method here, it’s Ustream and longish and see this blog post on another method.) I then xfer them in to the journal. It’s best with toner transfers to do them quickly, as a fresh print works best.

The other method in which I use photos is to draw them. I’ll bring an image up on screen and then sketch from the image. Sometimes I’ll add watercolor or acrylic over the top or l’ll go over the top of a background I’ve created in the past. Sometimes I’ll use images I’ve found on Flickr’s commons as inspiration.

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Photos can be used in so many different ways in art journaling it’s amazing and they are continually inspiring.

Check out Jasmin and Traci's posts.

Photos in my Art Journal pt 2

Check out Jasmin and Traci's posts.

I use the cameras to capture the things I see that spark my imagination or creativity. When I see something that captures my eye, I whip the iPoo out and snap a picture. In the summer I take a long walk with the intent to capture my surroundings. I use each of the cameras with a different purpose in mind. Mostly though I shoot pictures for the fun of it, I don’t know if they will end up in a journal or in a blog post.

With my iPoo I use several apps they are as follows: Hipstamatic, Instagram and Camera+. I use Camera+ and Hipstamatic most often. I enjoy the randomness of Hipstamatic and conversely, the control Camera+ gives me. I’ve been giving myself a little challenge using Hipstamatic which you can read about here. Most of the challenge is teaching myself to see for the camera and through the camera. I’m shooting the same subject 5 days a week and it’s a challenge to make the image new and interesting without relying on the app to do it for me.

image from www.flickr.com

With my PEN2 and point and shoot I transfer images to my computer using Picasa. I also use Picasa for minor edits- color correction, contrast, and switching the image to black and white if I’m looking for that. Most of the images I take with these 2 cameras are used pretty much straight out of the camera or switched to black and white. I don’t change much with them. Normally I up the contrast and increase the saturation of the images. If I need to do anything more intense, I use GIMP, which is a freeware Photoshop knock off.

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Ultimately with the PEN2 I’m a fan of Straight Out Of the Camera (SOOC) photos. I’ll crop them to size but the ultimate goal is to capture an image with the camera that will look, when printed as I attempted to capture it. For me the PEN2 is for clear contrasty images and the iPoo is for fun artsy images. With the PEN2 I was able to buy an inexpensive adapter (around $20 on eBay) and put vintage lenses on it. I chose Canon lenses because there were a lot on eBay. But I could have gone with vintage Russian lenses or Nikons or even old video lenses. Adapters rock my world and vintage lenses really give the modern camera a whole new feel.

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The iPoo is a fixed focus camera, meaning it has one lens and that's it… Except that you can get some great stick on lenses for the iPh0ne and iPoo. These little lenses come with a stick on ring that attaches to the iPoo and the lens then attaches with magnets. These little adapters are a ton of fun. They aren't high quality but they change the focusing ability of the camera. My favorites are the wide angle and the macro lenses.These little add ons can be found on eBay for pennies or you can get one of better quality on PhotoJojo.com. I also have that adapter ring on my cell phone's camera, I refer to my cell phone as the "kinda smart phone."

Ultimately the best camera is the one you'll use.

 Check out Jasmin and Traci's posts.

Journal Photography

Call this a Blog Circle, Jazmin, Traci Bunkers and I decided we’re all write on the same subject this week. Our topic for the week is: Using photography and photos in our art journals.

I’ve been talking to Jazmin aka Sirensidyll about how we both use cameras in our art journals. The more I talked to her the more I realize that my cameras are an integral part of my art journaling process. I have a camera in my bag pretty much everywhere I go. Here’s a brief overview of the cameras I use:
My iPod touch
A Canon Ixus 1100
and a Olympus Pen PL2 with a variety of vintage lenses

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In the past, before I got the iPod touch I used my Canon Ixus point and shoot more often than I do now. It was small and I could slip it into my bag and take it anywhere. My Canon P&S takes great clear pictures. Now that I have an iPod touch 4th generation I’ve got a smaller camera I can take anywhere. The photos it takes are not as good as the Canon but it does a pretty good job. Additionally I can download a bunch of cool apps for my iPod that adapt and change the appearance of the image. I take one of these 2 with me everywhere.

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In the summer I take my Olympus Pen PL2 with me almost everywhere. I purchased a few vintage lenses and an adapter so that the old manual lenses can be used. The old fashioned and antique lenses lend a different look and coloration than modern lenses. With the vintage or new lenses it takes sharp crisp photos with great color.

I use the iPoo for 90% of my image (not accurate mathmatically.) It’s so small and portable that I forget I’m carrying it. I don’t worry about dropping it, well much, and it doesn’t weight me down. Sure, it doesn’t have fancy lenses but it captures ideas as well as a thumbnail sketch.

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Something that is unusual about photography,  at least for me, is that I didn’t start taking pictures until I was in my last year at college. For that last year, I used disposable point and shoot cameras that I took to the local pharmacy for development. It wasn’t until I was 22 that I got my first “real” camera, a Canon ELPH, and it took bright crisp and clear images. I still have that camera, though I never use it. Shortly after that I got my first digital, and HP something or the other, a 1.2 mega pixel brick, and by brick, I mean it was brick sized, shaped and weight. After using that camera to it’s death I graduated to a Canon Digital ELPH and kept it for years.

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Wednesday we’ll all talk about what apps and programs we use to manipulate our images. Check out Jazmin and Traci's posts on their blogs.

All images in this blog post were shot with my iPoo touch 4th gen I'll talk about the apps I use in the next post. (I refer to my iP0d as the iPoo to avoid attracting attention from the spam brigade.)

Videos of Cowboy Drawings

I've writen previously about my obsession with the cowboys in Flickr's Commons. I even crafted my first Challenge! on ArtJournaling.ning.com around them. For the Challenge! I recorded myself sketching a few cowboys from the Commons. View the videos here and then head over to ArtJournaling.ning.com to check out the Challenge! and join in on the fun.

 

 

 

Challenge!

Challenge! is a group on ArtJOurnaling.ning.com that includes weekly challenges for art journalers. The group is free and donation based. It seems NIng has blocked me form being able to add a paypal button on my Challenge! pages. So here is the donation page for Challenge! If Challenge! has inspired or motivated you to work in your art journal, please consider a donation to help me run the site.

 

Tips

in practice: tell it to the page

The DayJob has a book club. We get to chose one of 3 books and then convene over dinner at a nice restaurant. I suppose that the goal at that point is to talk about the books but since I never go to the dinners I don’t really know the actualities of what occur, mostly though, I think people get drunk*.

image from www.flickr.com

Anyway. The memoir I chose irritated me. About half way in the writing style changed and the author wrote about something that irritated this crap out of me. Already the author wasn’t a very like-able character but this one aspect of her life bugged the crap out of me. She went on for pages explaining the whys and hows of what she’d done but it still… Irritated me. Begrudgingly I made my way through the last 100 pages of the book. Everything about the end of the book bugged the shit out of me. From that one point on, the author seemed arrogant, self absorbed, and annoying. Even at the end of the book I’m left irritated.

image from www.flickr.com

When I first got to that irritating passage I started to tweet about it, thought better of it, and wrote in my journal instead. I realized that what I was about to tweet would need more explaining than 140 characters. It didn’t belong on twitter or facebook. My incoherant rage directed toward an, at that point, faceless, author, didn’t belong online. It would have been far too difficult to explain.

The end point of this story is that sometimes we all need to just settle down and tell it to the page.

image from www.flickr.com

Continue reading

Challenge!

I’m pretty stoked to tell you all about the Challenge! group on AJ Ning. I’ve asked a group of my arty friends to help me out by being Hosts. Each month a new host will introduce the Challenge! Each Challenge! has 3 parts: Images, Colors, and Material. Depending on the host, you might get images they shots, copyright free images from Flickr’s Commons.

The images are meant to give you some inspiration. You don’t have to draw them, or even use them as collage fodder for your journal. You could be inspired by them to write about them, or doodle a new pattern, or even, write about how much you hate them.

The colors again, are meant as inspiration. You can use one or all of them in your art journal. You could do a whole page in one color, or 2 or 3. You could try and mix the colors. There are so many options with color it’s amazing. What about staining paper?

The material challenge is the cult of stuff aspect, use it up! If you have it in your stash, use it up! Test it out, use this Challenge! to try it out in multiple ways, learn how to use that one material in every way possible. Try it, test it!

Each Challenge! will lasts 2 weeks, then the next will start. We get each host for a month!

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