Through creating this product I have learnt about the wide
range of tools that I can use on adobe software such as InDesign and Photoshop
for example the ability to import different fonts off of the internet, from
websites such as dafont.com, this aided me a great deal as I was able to import
the font that I used for my mast head and my cover-lines. The ability to
change/enhance a pictures quality, brightness and contrast helped me to achieve
specific looks that helped with the connotation of my genre. Finally crop tools
and eraser tools on these software’s have allowed me to add a unique effect to
my images as well as the ability to merge 2 pictures together effectively.
Online tools such as popplet and blogger have allowed me to
present my work to a higher standard whilst also helping me organise my work
and answers to evaluation questions into sections and then subsections. Dafont.com
has helped me to create a unique product as it has taught me about the ability
to share and create different fonts online. Dafont was key for me as it allowed me to be far more picking when it came to selecting my fonts as I felt that the pre-installed fonts that come with such software as InDesign and Photoshop were to generic and weren't good enough for an As coursework piece.
Photoshop and InDesign have taught me about the importance
of alignment within a music magazine as my original draft had cover lines all
over the page and looked messy and scruffy whereas when I redrafted and aligned
them all it looked clearer and sleek, the ruler tool helped to achieve this
look as a green line would appear on my page if the text/image/table was
aligned with another on the page.
Whilst using Photoshop I learnt the importance of contrast and brightness when trying to manipulate an image. The Images I manipulated were the image of TYB, my featured artist, on a bench and the image of Queen-E on my contents page. The Queen-E image was relatively simple to do as I took the original image of her on a white background. all i had to do was find the background I wanted to use, crop my model out of her shot and place her onto this image. the difficulty lie in making this new image realistic, as i didn't want the fact i had just cropped and pasted her onto a background to be very obvious. the reason i decided to alter the original image was because I felt it needed to have more generic conventions, specifically the dirty and impoverish feel that many artists of the grime genre strive for.
The image of TYB was slightly more challenging to alter as i wanted to keep the floor, bench and model of the original shot but replace the background, as i felt that it didnt connote the grime genre strongly enough. I therefore had to find an appropriate image of a graffiti covered street that would match the parts of the image i wanted to save. The real challenge was adjusting the brightness of the different levels and making sure there was no apparent seam between the two images. I again used the Quick lasso tool and the sliders that control brightness, contrast, exposure and colour levels to create what i believe to be an all round appealing and believable shot.
Websites such as online mood board creators allowed me to
add a different form of image to my blog which taught me about presentation
even within my planning exercises as it helped to make my idea clearer not only
to others but also to myself. Soundcloud again helped me to present my tasks in
a different way which helped to show a wide range ICT skill.
The Camera I used was a Cannon EOS 700D. This process helped me hone my camera skills in as they were up until this point relatively basic. I learnt the importance of shot composition and the effect this can have on the way an audience interprets an media text. The composition of my shots was vitally important as my artist needed to have the rugged bad boy looks of a grime artist but also needed to look somewhat approachable and respectful of who he is and where he has come from. I feel that the shots I have taken help to portray this message.
