Micron Photo Club Agenda June 5th 2022"
Agenda
1. Review this months Assignment "Complimentary Color"
2. Next Month’s Assignment "Feel your Shot" see description below
3. This month’s Presentation we have a real treat, it is from Mike Shipman who will shares some of his vast knowledge and experience in photography. Title: Taking the Tech out of Photography
Bio
Mike Shipman owns and operates Blue Planet Photography in Nampa, ID. He is a photographer, instructor, author, sometime graphic designer, book and paper maker, and former wildlife biologist. He worked for the Colorado State Parks system as a ranger, the Denver Museum of Natural History as a Zoology Assistant, the USFWS National Ecology Research Center, US Forest service, and private environmental consulting before turning to photography. He has always been interested in science and art. In photography, Mike is a digital photographer as well as working in the historic process of cyanotype. His photographs have been shown in Boise galleries and art shows, The Miami Center for Photography, The Embassy of Uruguay in The Hague, and in 2021 some of his photographs were selected to the U.S. Art in Embassies program. His photographs have been published in Shutterbug, McCall Magazine, PDX Magazine, SHUTR.photo and others. He is a past president of the Intermountain West Chapter of the American Society of Media Professionals (ASMP), Past president of the Idaho Photographic Workshop, Vice President of the Boise Camera Club, and a founding board member of the Treasure Valley Artists’ Alliance. Since 2010, he has been an Idaho Commission of the Arts Teaching Artist and on the advisory boards for the Career Technical Education photography program at Timberline High School in Boise and Columbia High School in Nampa. Mike designed the movie posters, DVD artwork, and is the webmaster for 2 award-winning documentary films (Bravo! Common Men, Uncommon Valor, and I Married The War). He has authored and self-published two photography books, The Ecology of Photography : Senses and Perception and The Exposure Equation and a historical fiction “dimestore novel” Big Toe Joe, The Legend of Cannery Row”. His books are handmade in the bindery he has been building in his garage. He’s currently working on future photography books. Mike conducts photography classes and workshops locally and internationally. Web: blueplanetphoto.com and mikeshipman.com
Title: Taking the Tech out of Photography
The process of making a photograph is generally very simple. It’s partly the reason people to this day still do not consider photography to be art. But, over the years, often in the guise of making things simple, the process has actually been made more complicated. One of the biggest barriers for people starting (or progressing) in photography these days is technology – or the perception of the role of technology in photography. Digital cameras, software, printers, computers, digital image storage…all present barriers to making photographs, and it’s very easy to be caught up in the spaghetti of buttons, dials, sliders, menus, touch screens, and the never-ending upgrade cycles and image fads we’ve become familiar with. In this program, I’m going to illustrate this barrier of complexity, then simplify it as much as possible, using the process of determining exposure as an example.