
2. My most challenging project in class actually came at the end of the quarter. By far the "Edible Architecture" quiz was the most frustrating and definitely the least successful. When I begin a project I usually have a clear idea of how I want to change and edit, and for this quiz I couldn't piece and patch to get a completely cohesive end result. Clone stamp and resizing were not my friends here. As for mastering these tools; I don't think i'm there yet. However, the beauty of PS is that there are 35867389769451 ways to do the same thing. I then instead of clone stamping and erasing over and over began to use layer duplication and masks to get the repetitive pattern feel as in my final. You can tell in the grasswork where "duplicate layer" really would have gone a long way AND I could edit after I undeniably would screw up:

3. Every time I create a piece there are some artistic choices I make because I believe that they are essential to that work's overall meaning and there are some choices I make because that's just the way I always do it. Sometimes these battling methods can become a real issue when what you have always done isn't the best way, or even an available way to do something. I also believe that the "purely stylistic" choices you make are almost never that simple. Looking at my very first Selections quiz and my Retouching assignment I will talk about this a little more in depth. First the Selections:

I burn the edges of almost all of my photos I edit to create a vignette that ranges from slight to extreme. Here I did the same thing because well, that's what I do. However I also burn things when I want them to look darker or more edgy. Here the burn and levels almost black out the periphery images; forcing you to focus on the center image but also creating an environment of despair and hopelessness because the black creates an empty. So now not only do you get that this is an average crack whore, but you may even feel bad for her because you sense that it was not her choice because she has nowhere to go from here.

The retouching project is strangely one of my favorites. This used to be a mystery to me, because who would love to delete pimples and minimize scars and skin tone? I do. It's makeup in high-def for me, which is sometimes why I believe its harder to edit guys because I have a tendency to "glamourize" any portrait I touch. On a personal note this raw image is my boyfriend, and I shamelessly believe that he needs no retouching. Also on my computer at home I have the Imagemonic Portraiture filter that naturally softens skin at any level you choose, so having to do this the long way was something I had to dig way back in my PS toolbox for. Usually to even out skin tone I would take the air brush and constantly sample from the skin source to soften and cover, but it just seemed wrong here. Because of my relationship with the subject matter I couldn't bring myself to blast on a layer of paint to remove all the character. Instead I chose the patch tool over and over so that at least I would have the knowledge that it was his skin I was retouching with and the image could stay away from being so plastic.***
*** Small airbrushing was done around smaller areas and on a very light opacity to create a contiguous tone


