Sam's Photo Essay of ifield Community

Friday, 15 January 2010

my idea

  • What is your topic?
  • What I'm going to do for my topic would be of Ifield's community
  • What is your purpose (What do you hope to say)?
  • Im hoping to say would be how old Ifield is, what buildings there are, when they were built, where they are built, why they are still here and who lives there.
  • Who is your audience? Who would you like to view your essay?
  • People who might live in Ifield.
  • What pictures do you plan on taking? Write them down before sketching them into a storyboard.
  • The pictures I'm planning on taking would be...
  • 1. Ifield barn Theatre.
  • 2. Ifield Church.
  • 3. Deerwood House.
  • 4. Manor Green College.
  • 5. The Plough Inn.
  • 6. Ifield Parade.
And Ifield Watermill if possible.

Monday, 11 January 2010

National Geographic: China


The difference of these two photos is that the first picture is of a thousand chinese people walking in one direction and the second picture is of the Great Wall of China having a snowstorm during the winter night.
They are similar because the Great Wall of China is a symbol to the chinese people and the chinese people's ancestors built the great wall long ago.
The different books are formatted into pictures first and then journals later, or it could be all journal and no pictures or all pictures and no journal, either way it's all the same, they are all articles on the same subject that the National Geographics show us.

The author would choose the pictures first because if he or she writes out the journal first without knowing the subject by visual, then he or she would've got the wrong facts and the book would be useless without visual facts first.

A book illustrated by photos instead of drawings is accurate, photos provide accurate details while drawings provide fiction, unless you're an artist, otherwise it would be a different story altogether.



The list of my three photo essays would be of the following:
1. Beautiful
2. Insparational
3. Accuracy