Archive for April, 2009
I really think that this is something interesting to share with every aspiring photographer.
From Momenta Workshops website:
I think what they try to do is really inspiring. I know some people who have gone on their workshops as well and have found the entirely fulfilling. You are ensured to come back with an exceptional portfolio, enhanced skills, and an experience of the lifetime. If you have the dough to do it, I would totally go for it. I know I certainly would. Sadly, my pockets are devastatingly empty these days.
In cahoots with Momenta is one, Jamie Rose. She’s an Alumna from my school, American University, and certainly someone to know in the field of photography. She spoke to my class the other day and had a lot of interesting things to say about the field of photography, the marketability of it and yourself, as well as the beauty of networking. Not only that but she also has one of these handy little blog things that are just popping up everywhere these days. Check her blog out here.
Also, if anyone has been on one of the Momenta Workshops, I’d love to get your feedback about them!
Polaroid may be stopping the manufacturing of polaroid film, but the polaroid feeling lives on. Poladroid
is a fun and easy, downloadable to Macs or PC, software that brings all of the fun of the Polaroid to your desktop! And for way cheaper too since a box of the cheapest film still ran around fifteen bucks for only a handful of exposures.
Not only does the downloadable program convert your photos to one of your timeless, favorite formats, it recreates the process too. After you drag the photo you want as a Polaroid into the little camera icon on your desktop and you hear the familiar “click,” the picture will appear on your desktop as well. You get to watch the entire Polaroid process unfold as time goes by and the picture darkens. Heck, you can even shake your computer a little if you’d really like to get into it. Though this time, it actually won’t ruin the development process of the photo. You can also stop the development at any attime to create whatever kind of coloring you like.
It’s amazing. The gratification is even more instant than with the Polaroid itself.
And if sharing your photos with your friends is not enough, simply upload them to the Poladroid Flickr Account. But let me remind you. If your picture is bad, turning it into a Polaroid picture will not make it a good one. So don’t even try.
Here are a few of my own favorites from the website:






