DPC announces brand new course on Composition : art of framing

composition-rules-rule-of-thirds

 

Launching Brand new Workshop on Composing good Pictures

About Workshop

DPC Presents composition and advanced composition workshop to enable and empower you to click better pictures.  This high Quality content is based on the inputs from the Stanford University professor Mark Levoy’s photography workshop.During the workshop we will be working on composition and various techniques to see pictures and create better pictures

Trust us this is the best photography workshop one can ever attend

Workshop Content and Highlights:

· Rules of Composition and common composition
· Rule of thirds , Rule of odds and other rules.
· Learning good Composition
· Lines as pectoral elements & arrangement of Light
· Light as decorative element
· Shapes , Patterns and repeated Patterns
· Rhythm and Texture
· Lighting and pictorial Design
· Colors and pectoral Design
· Symmetry and asymmetry
· Framing and Dynamic Framing

Workshop USP:

· Classes only on Weekends
· Indoor and Outdoor , hands on workshop
· Outdoor Practical session with instructor
· Assignment for practice at home
· Opportunity to interact with instructors/peers.
· Send your works for review and feedback
· Certificate of participation

Who can join?

Students
Amateurs & Beginners
Professionals
New camera buyers
Aspiring artists
Home makers and Mothers
Keen on improving photos

Requirements:
Loads of enthusiasm and a DSLR camera or Digital Point n shoot and basics of Photography and know how of the camera

Workshop Fee: Rs 12500
Days : Sat and Sunday
Date : 22 & 23, 30 & 31st Oct and 5& 6 Nov
Time : 2.00 pm to 4.00 pm

Photo Choupal : Art of Editing in Windows 8.1

follow up!Photo Cha

Thanks for the overwhelming response of second session on Photo Choupal , Now as promised here is the third session.

Here we go presenting latest Follow up session @ photo Choupal: Art of edting in Windows 8.1 and above

This activity is free for DPC members and DPC workshop participants .

Take up assignments for next month, develop photo stories, and work on your portfolios

The Idea behind organizing the event is to help you achieving desired results in photography.

Many times we are so busy clicking pictures in one style that we forget the basics and couple of other tricks and you fail when it is required most .

This follow-up session will strengthen your basics and help you going to the next level. Move to the next level.

During the two hour session you can talk to mentors , get your work critiqued , clear your doubts and move on.

so what are you waiting for . Rush to DPC lounge last Sunday of every month 4 pm to 6 pm.

Introduction to Studio Lighting 24-25th Sep

august 21 | 9pmthe collective-2

Introduction to studio lighting.

In this two day workshop on studio lighting we will cover six different types of lighting.

Hi-key and Low Key lighting
Split lighting
loop , Rembrandt and butterfly
3-point lighting
It will also be covering inverse square law of lighting
Product , Food, portrait and Fashion.

First day will be theory followed by hands on practical.

Beginning of the practical will be introduction to studio: Do and Don’ts in studio, features of studio light, maintaining a studio, taking care of studio equipment, Knowing the light stands, soft box.

Key Features of the workshop:
As it will be a detailed workshop on studio lighting, It will mainly emphasize on portraits as one can deeply understand lighting on human figure. But as the workshop contains different types of lighting and it will be the base of all kinds of lighting, so one light any kind of products, food, portrait or fashion after this workshop.

Requirements
All DPC workshops require you to have loads of enthusiasm.You can have a DSLR and you know how to use your camera features
Who Should attend
Photography Enthusiasts .Students of photography and artStudio ownersPersuing careers in PhotographyWorking photographers who wish to hone their skill and learn from the expert

Workshop Fee
Rs 2500 ( open to all)
Rs 2000 for DPC members

To register www.delhiphotographyclub.com/register or call 8826712162 for more details

World Photo Day : Bang bang Club movie screening at DPC 19th August

book

DPC celebrates World Photo Day with full of zeal and enthuisam keeping the spirit alive we are screen this beautiful movie at DPC.

You are invited.

The Bang Bang Club

The Bang Bang Club was a group of photographers and photojournalists active within the townships of South Africa between 1990 and 1994, during the transition from the apartheid system to government based on universal suffrage. This period saw much black on black factional violence, particularly fighting between ANC and IFP supporters, after the lifting of the bans on both political parties.
Kevin Carter, Greg Marinovich, Ken Oosterbroek, and João Silva were the four associated with the name, although a number of photographers and photojournalists worked alongside them (such as James Nachtwey and Gary Bernard). A movie about the group, directed by Steven Silver and starring Taylor Kitsch, Ryan Phillippe and Malin Åkerman, premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2010.

The name “The Bang Bang Club” was born out of an article published in the South African magazine Living. Originally named The Bang Bang Paparazzi, it was changed to “Club” because the members felt the word paparazzi misrepresented their work. The name comes from the culture itself; township residents spoke to the photographers about the “bang-bang” in reference to violence occurring within their communities, but more literally, “bang-bang” refers to the sound of gunfire and is a colloquialism used by conflict photographers.
On 18 April 1994, during a firefight between the National Peacekeeping Force and African National Congress supporters in the Thokoza township, friendly fire killed Oosterbroek and seriously injured Marinovich. An inquest into Oosterbroek’s death began in 1995. The magistrate ruled that no party should be blamed for the death. In 1999, peacekeeper Brian Mkhize told Marinovich and Silva that he believed that the bullet that killed Oosterbroek had come from the National Peacekeeping Force.
In July 1994, Carter committed suicide.
On 23 October 2010, Silva stepped on a landmine while on patrol with US soldiers in Kandahar, Afghanistan and lost both legs below the knee.